Jean-Paul Sartre(1905-1980)
- Writer
- Actor
- Soundtrack
Jean-Paul Charles-Aymard Sartre was born on June 21, 1905, in Paris,
France. His father, Jean-Baptiste Sartre, was an officer in the French
Navy. His mother, Anne-Marie Schweitzer, was the cousin of Nobel Prize
laureate Dr. Albert Schweitzer. Sartre was one year old when his father died. He
was raised in Meudon, at the home of his tough grandfather Charles
Schweitzer, a high school professor. His early education included
music, mathematic, and classical literature. He studied at the Lycee
Montaigne and at Lycee Henri IV in Paris. In 1917 his mother married an
engineer at the naval yards in La Rochelle. There young Sartre suffered
under his controlling stepfather, whom he called an "intruder". Such
experiences shaped his character to rebel against any restrictions and
domination.
The happiest part of his childhood was when Sartre met Paul Nizan, who was
his classmate at the Lycee Henri IV in Paris. They became constant
companions and best friends. Sartre continued his studies in Paris at
Lycee Louis-Le-Grand, then at Ecole Normale Superieure and Sorbonne.
There Sartre advanced in his studies of philosophy, absorbing mainly
from the "Gifford Lectures" by Henri Bergson and "The Principles of
Psychology" by Harvard philosopher William James, as well as from
Immanuel Kant, Friedrich Nietzsche, Edmund Husserl, Søren Kierkegaard, Friedrich Hegel,
Karl Marx and Martin Heidegger.
Sartre saw the artificiality of grown-ups in the bourgeois class as the
outcome of their spiritually destructive conformity. His Sorbonne
classmate and girlfriend Simone de Beauvoir was also an unrestricted thinker and
later one of the founders of contemporary feminism. Both learned to
hate the restrictions of upper-class life. Both favored an "authentic
state of being". In 1932 Sartre proposed to Beauvoir, but she turned
him down and went on teaching alone. In 1935 she introduced Sartre to
her 18-year-old student Olga Kozakiewich and the three formed the
"family". Sartre was used by Beauvoir, who merged both relationships
into a trio, that led to an unexpected and overwhelming outcome. While
they imagined the trio would illustrate the 'authenticity' of their
relationships; in reality the inevitable competition from the younger
and independent-minded Olga became a growing threat. Beauvoir saw Olga
as an object, a mere cast member of the game. She also overestimated
her own tolerance. Eventually the trio failed before the challenge to
reciprocate in recognition of each one's "authentic" consciousness.
Each member wrote a different account of the same events in their
"family" life. In Sartre's trilogy "Les chemins de la liberte" (The
Roads to Freedom 1945-1949) Olga is disguised as the character of
Ivich.
Sartre and de Beauvoir continued experimenting with their "open family"
by including several former students of both Beauvoir and Sartre,
forming a unique social group with Olga Kazakiewich, Nathalie Sorokine
and Jacques-Laurent Bost. The complex manner of relationships in the
"family" was somewhat based on the intellectual connection between
students and teachers, who also shared cooking and other domestic
duties. Other family members' "authentic" consciousness added to social
inventiveness and developed a sort of a survival group-therapy during
the occupation of Paris in WWII. "Existence precedes transformation of
consciousness" - commented Sartre.
In 1938 he wrote "La Nausee" (Nausea), which became the canonical work
of existentialism. It was partially influenced by Franz Kafka and Edmund
Husserl, reiterating the belief that human life has no purpose. The
book is set in a French town where Antoine, a 30-year-old historian, is
doing his research on an 18th-century politician. He is gradually
overtaken by a sickness he calls nausea. This alters his senses,
thoughts and emotional experiences of the past and present in an
uncommon way. Antoine is anxiously searching for the lost meaning of
things, people and events. The character of Antoine embodies Sartre's
theories of existential angst, and his own search through the chaos of
things and events; that are crowding the human life.
Sartre was initially torn between his pacifism and his anti-Nazi
position. In 1939 he was drafted into the French army and assigned to
the 70th Division in Nancy, then transferred to Morsbonn military camp.
There he started writing his "L'etre et neant". He was captured by the
Germans and imprisoned from 1940-1941. While in prison he reread
Martin Heidegger and wrote the play "Bariona". In March of 1941 he escaped from
the Nazi POW camp. He and Beauvoir traveled to the south of France
where they wooed André Gide and André Malraux to their underground group,
"Socialisme et Liberte". Their active resistance was soon tamed into
mere writing for "Combat", published by Albert Camus. Sartre became a
teacher in Lycee Condorcet from 1941-1944 and supported the "family" of
five during the occupation of Paris. At that time his opus magnum
"L'etre et neant" (Being and Nothingness, 1943) was completed and
published. He also wrote a play, "No Exit", as an attempt "to repeat
'Being and Nothingness' in different words". It premiered in May of
1944. In 1945 Sartre with his intellectual friends co-founded "Les
Tempes Modernes", a leftist journal named after Charles Chaplin's film Modern Times (1936).
Sartre published Beauvoir's works first, giving her a steady platform
and publicity. In 1945 he published "L'age de raison" (The Age of
Reason), beginning the trilogy of "The Roads to Freedom".
His "Reflexions sur la question juive" (Reflections on the Jewish
Question) was written after the liberation of Paris from the Nazi
occupation in 1944. The first part (The Portrait of the Anti-Semite)
was published in December of 1945 in Les Temps Modernes. Sartre deals
with anti-Semitism and reaction to it on all levels. In 1962 Sartre
adopted a Jewish musician, Arlette El Kaim, and later took his adopted
daughter along on his visit to Israel, where he accepted an honorary
doctorate from Hebrew University in 1976. Through his life Sartre
expressed his interest in Messianic Judaism. A few months before his
death he began a study of Jewish history. In his last interview with
his friend and associate Benny Levy, Sartre said that "the messianic
idea is the base of the revolutionary idea", but violent revolution is
not the way.
In 1950 Sartre denounced Soviet labor camps, known as gulag prison
camps. In 1955 he and Beauvoir went on official visits to the Soviet
Union and to communist China. As left-leaning academics they accepted
the official invitations from the communist governments. Sartre and
Beauvoir met with Nikita Khrushchev. Beauvoir was commissioned by the Communist
governments to write positively about communism and the 1917
revolution. Beauvoir took their money and published her shameful book,
for which she and Sartre were ostracized in the West. In 1960 the two
visited Cuba on the invitation of Fidel Castro. "Every man is a political
animal," stated Sartre when he started as an editor of La Liberacion.
Sartre came to disaffection with the bourgeois lifestyle, as one of the
perpetual ceremony that can strip people from their identity. For a
similar reason he saw religion as a prison, although he was baptized
Catholic. He lived a very modest life in a small apartment which he
shared with Beauvoir on Rue Bonaparte in Montparnasse. There were
attacks on his home in 1961, most likely by right-wing elements
outraged by his position on Algerian independence (he was for it).
Sartre spoke out on behalf of the Hungarians in 1956 and on behalf of
the Czechs in 1968. He presided over the International War Crimes
Tribunal set up by Bertrand Russell in 1967. He turned down prizes and took no
money for any of his political positions; unlike his partner Beauvoir.
Such independence made his voice more credible.
Jean-Paul Sartre quit writing literature after decades of success and
misunderstanding. Ambiguity of his ideas and political evolution only
reflected an effort to keep up with the rapidly changing times. His
existentialism became a philosophy of the beatniks. His works were
prohibited by the Catholic "index". "If God does not exist, everything
is permitted", quoted Sartre from Fyodor Dostoevsky. He finally renounced
literature as a "machine for producing words", and refused to accept
the Nobel Prize for Literature, which he was awarded in 1964. He
exhausted himself during the work on "Critique de la raison
dialectique" (Critique of Dialectical Reason, 1960), the work he wanted
to be remembered for. He left the unfinished massive biography of
Gustave Flaubert, and over 300 personal letters to Beauvoir, who published them
all after his death.
Sartre underwent his transformation from being a disciple of Andre Gide
to a complete break-away. In his many incarnations--the philosopher,
novelist, playwright, journalist, song lyricist, magazine editor,
political activist--Sartre moved ahead by breaking old rules. He even
used hard psychotropic drugs to "break the bones in his head" and think
big. Sartre's opposition to the rigid social organization and
self-destructive nature of class society and inevitable fatality of the
modern world was paralleled by that of Aldous Huxley.
Jean-Paul Sartre exhausted himself with overwork, stress, drugs and
alcohol. He died of edema of the lungs on April 15, 1980. His funeral
was attended by 50,000 people, when he was laid to rest in the
Cimetiere du Montparnasse in Paris, France. Six years later Beauvoir,
who refused his marriage proposal in their youth, joined him in his
grave forever.
France. His father, Jean-Baptiste Sartre, was an officer in the French
Navy. His mother, Anne-Marie Schweitzer, was the cousin of Nobel Prize
laureate Dr. Albert Schweitzer. Sartre was one year old when his father died. He
was raised in Meudon, at the home of his tough grandfather Charles
Schweitzer, a high school professor. His early education included
music, mathematic, and classical literature. He studied at the Lycee
Montaigne and at Lycee Henri IV in Paris. In 1917 his mother married an
engineer at the naval yards in La Rochelle. There young Sartre suffered
under his controlling stepfather, whom he called an "intruder". Such
experiences shaped his character to rebel against any restrictions and
domination.
The happiest part of his childhood was when Sartre met Paul Nizan, who was
his classmate at the Lycee Henri IV in Paris. They became constant
companions and best friends. Sartre continued his studies in Paris at
Lycee Louis-Le-Grand, then at Ecole Normale Superieure and Sorbonne.
There Sartre advanced in his studies of philosophy, absorbing mainly
from the "Gifford Lectures" by Henri Bergson and "The Principles of
Psychology" by Harvard philosopher William James, as well as from
Immanuel Kant, Friedrich Nietzsche, Edmund Husserl, Søren Kierkegaard, Friedrich Hegel,
Karl Marx and Martin Heidegger.
Sartre saw the artificiality of grown-ups in the bourgeois class as the
outcome of their spiritually destructive conformity. His Sorbonne
classmate and girlfriend Simone de Beauvoir was also an unrestricted thinker and
later one of the founders of contemporary feminism. Both learned to
hate the restrictions of upper-class life. Both favored an "authentic
state of being". In 1932 Sartre proposed to Beauvoir, but she turned
him down and went on teaching alone. In 1935 she introduced Sartre to
her 18-year-old student Olga Kozakiewich and the three formed the
"family". Sartre was used by Beauvoir, who merged both relationships
into a trio, that led to an unexpected and overwhelming outcome. While
they imagined the trio would illustrate the 'authenticity' of their
relationships; in reality the inevitable competition from the younger
and independent-minded Olga became a growing threat. Beauvoir saw Olga
as an object, a mere cast member of the game. She also overestimated
her own tolerance. Eventually the trio failed before the challenge to
reciprocate in recognition of each one's "authentic" consciousness.
Each member wrote a different account of the same events in their
"family" life. In Sartre's trilogy "Les chemins de la liberte" (The
Roads to Freedom 1945-1949) Olga is disguised as the character of
Ivich.
Sartre and de Beauvoir continued experimenting with their "open family"
by including several former students of both Beauvoir and Sartre,
forming a unique social group with Olga Kazakiewich, Nathalie Sorokine
and Jacques-Laurent Bost. The complex manner of relationships in the
"family" was somewhat based on the intellectual connection between
students and teachers, who also shared cooking and other domestic
duties. Other family members' "authentic" consciousness added to social
inventiveness and developed a sort of a survival group-therapy during
the occupation of Paris in WWII. "Existence precedes transformation of
consciousness" - commented Sartre.
In 1938 he wrote "La Nausee" (Nausea), which became the canonical work
of existentialism. It was partially influenced by Franz Kafka and Edmund
Husserl, reiterating the belief that human life has no purpose. The
book is set in a French town where Antoine, a 30-year-old historian, is
doing his research on an 18th-century politician. He is gradually
overtaken by a sickness he calls nausea. This alters his senses,
thoughts and emotional experiences of the past and present in an
uncommon way. Antoine is anxiously searching for the lost meaning of
things, people and events. The character of Antoine embodies Sartre's
theories of existential angst, and his own search through the chaos of
things and events; that are crowding the human life.
Sartre was initially torn between his pacifism and his anti-Nazi
position. In 1939 he was drafted into the French army and assigned to
the 70th Division in Nancy, then transferred to Morsbonn military camp.
There he started writing his "L'etre et neant". He was captured by the
Germans and imprisoned from 1940-1941. While in prison he reread
Martin Heidegger and wrote the play "Bariona". In March of 1941 he escaped from
the Nazi POW camp. He and Beauvoir traveled to the south of France
where they wooed André Gide and André Malraux to their underground group,
"Socialisme et Liberte". Their active resistance was soon tamed into
mere writing for "Combat", published by Albert Camus. Sartre became a
teacher in Lycee Condorcet from 1941-1944 and supported the "family" of
five during the occupation of Paris. At that time his opus magnum
"L'etre et neant" (Being and Nothingness, 1943) was completed and
published. He also wrote a play, "No Exit", as an attempt "to repeat
'Being and Nothingness' in different words". It premiered in May of
1944. In 1945 Sartre with his intellectual friends co-founded "Les
Tempes Modernes", a leftist journal named after Charles Chaplin's film Modern Times (1936).
Sartre published Beauvoir's works first, giving her a steady platform
and publicity. In 1945 he published "L'age de raison" (The Age of
Reason), beginning the trilogy of "The Roads to Freedom".
His "Reflexions sur la question juive" (Reflections on the Jewish
Question) was written after the liberation of Paris from the Nazi
occupation in 1944. The first part (The Portrait of the Anti-Semite)
was published in December of 1945 in Les Temps Modernes. Sartre deals
with anti-Semitism and reaction to it on all levels. In 1962 Sartre
adopted a Jewish musician, Arlette El Kaim, and later took his adopted
daughter along on his visit to Israel, where he accepted an honorary
doctorate from Hebrew University in 1976. Through his life Sartre
expressed his interest in Messianic Judaism. A few months before his
death he began a study of Jewish history. In his last interview with
his friend and associate Benny Levy, Sartre said that "the messianic
idea is the base of the revolutionary idea", but violent revolution is
not the way.
In 1950 Sartre denounced Soviet labor camps, known as gulag prison
camps. In 1955 he and Beauvoir went on official visits to the Soviet
Union and to communist China. As left-leaning academics they accepted
the official invitations from the communist governments. Sartre and
Beauvoir met with Nikita Khrushchev. Beauvoir was commissioned by the Communist
governments to write positively about communism and the 1917
revolution. Beauvoir took their money and published her shameful book,
for which she and Sartre were ostracized in the West. In 1960 the two
visited Cuba on the invitation of Fidel Castro. "Every man is a political
animal," stated Sartre when he started as an editor of La Liberacion.
Sartre came to disaffection with the bourgeois lifestyle, as one of the
perpetual ceremony that can strip people from their identity. For a
similar reason he saw religion as a prison, although he was baptized
Catholic. He lived a very modest life in a small apartment which he
shared with Beauvoir on Rue Bonaparte in Montparnasse. There were
attacks on his home in 1961, most likely by right-wing elements
outraged by his position on Algerian independence (he was for it).
Sartre spoke out on behalf of the Hungarians in 1956 and on behalf of
the Czechs in 1968. He presided over the International War Crimes
Tribunal set up by Bertrand Russell in 1967. He turned down prizes and took no
money for any of his political positions; unlike his partner Beauvoir.
Such independence made his voice more credible.
Jean-Paul Sartre quit writing literature after decades of success and
misunderstanding. Ambiguity of his ideas and political evolution only
reflected an effort to keep up with the rapidly changing times. His
existentialism became a philosophy of the beatniks. His works were
prohibited by the Catholic "index". "If God does not exist, everything
is permitted", quoted Sartre from Fyodor Dostoevsky. He finally renounced
literature as a "machine for producing words", and refused to accept
the Nobel Prize for Literature, which he was awarded in 1964. He
exhausted himself during the work on "Critique de la raison
dialectique" (Critique of Dialectical Reason, 1960), the work he wanted
to be remembered for. He left the unfinished massive biography of
Gustave Flaubert, and over 300 personal letters to Beauvoir, who published them
all after his death.
Sartre underwent his transformation from being a disciple of Andre Gide
to a complete break-away. In his many incarnations--the philosopher,
novelist, playwright, journalist, song lyricist, magazine editor,
political activist--Sartre moved ahead by breaking old rules. He even
used hard psychotropic drugs to "break the bones in his head" and think
big. Sartre's opposition to the rigid social organization and
self-destructive nature of class society and inevitable fatality of the
modern world was paralleled by that of Aldous Huxley.
Jean-Paul Sartre exhausted himself with overwork, stress, drugs and
alcohol. He died of edema of the lungs on April 15, 1980. His funeral
was attended by 50,000 people, when he was laid to rest in the
Cimetiere du Montparnasse in Paris, France. Six years later Beauvoir,
who refused his marriage proposal in their youth, joined him in his
grave forever.