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Jacques Chardonne

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Jacques Chardonne (born Jacques Boutelleau; 2 January 1884, in Barbezieux-Saint-Hilaire, Charente – 29 May 1968, in La Frette-sur-Seine) is the pseudonym of French writer Jacques Boutelleau. He was a member of the so-called Groupe de Barbezieux.

Early life and career

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Jacques Chardonne birthplace in Barbezieux, Charente, France

His American Quaker mother was an heiress to the Haviland porcelain dynasty and his father was French. He was raised Protestant. His brother-in-law was of the Delamain cognac dynasty. This informed his trilogy Les Destinées Sentimentales.[1] He was a leader of the Hussards and held in high regard for the award-winning Claire.

World War II

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He supported collaboration with the Vichy and in 1940 produced "Private Chronicle 1940", which favored the submission of Europe to Adolf Hitler.[2] He was a member of the Groupe Collaboration, an initiative that encouraged close cultural ties between France and Germany.[3] In October 1941, Chardonne, with seven other French writers including Pierre Drieu la Rochelle, Marcel Jouhandeau et Robert Brasillach, accepted an invitation from Joseph Goebbels to visit Germany for a Congress of European Writers in Weimar. In his diary during the trip, Chardonne described how he wanted to "make [his] body a fraternal bridge between Germany and France".[4] After World War II he was denounced for Nazi collaboration[5] and spent time in prison.[6] In an article titled "Jacques Chardonne et Mein Kampf" the 'Frenchness' of his writing was also questioned.[7]

Death and rehabilitation

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He died in 1968 after efforts to restore his image. By the 1980s anti-totalitarian journalists like Raymond Aron began to reappraise collaborationist authors like Chardonne.[8] In 1986 his award-winning Claire was made into a TV film[9] and in 2001 Olivier Assayas adapted Les Destinées Sentimentales to film.[10]

Awards

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Works (in French)

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  • 1921 : L'Épithalame (Paris, librairie Stock et Vienne, Larousse, 1921; Grasset, 1929; Ferenczi, 1933; Albin-Michel, 1951; S. C. Edit. Rencontre, Lausanne, 1961; L.G.F., 1972; Albin-Michel, 1987);
  • 1927 : Le Chant du Bienheureux (Librairie Stock, 1927; Albin-Michel, 1951);
  • 1929 : Les Varais, dédié à Maurice Delamain (Grasset, 1929; Ferenczi et fils, 1932; Albin-Michel, 1951; Grasset, 1989);
  • 1930 : Eva ou le journal interrompu, dédié à Camille Belguise, sa seconde épouse (Grasset, 1930; Ferenczi et fils, 1935; Albin-Michel, 1951; Gallimard, 1983);
  • 1931 : Claire, dédié à Henri Fauconnier (Grasset, 1931; Ferenczi et fils, 1936; Piazza, 1938; Albin-Michel, 1952; club du Livre du Mois, 1957; Rombaldi, 1975; Grasset, 1983);
  • 1932 : L'Amour du Prochain, dédié « à mon fils Gérard » (Grasset, 1932; La Jeune Parque, 1947; Albin-Michel, 1955);
  • 1934 : Les Destinées sentimentales (Grasset, 1934-1936), trilogie : La Femme de Jean Barnery, dédié à Jacques Delamain (id., 1934); Pauline (id., 1934); Porcelaine de Limoges (id., 1936; Grasset, 1947; Albin-Michel, 1951; L.G.F., 1984)
  • 1937 : Romanesques, dédié à Paul Géraldy (Stock, 1937; édit. Colbert et Stock, 1943; Albin-Michel, 1954; La Table Ronde, 1996);
  • 1937 : L'Amour, c'est beaucoup plus que l'amour, dédié « à Jean Rostand son ami » (Stock, 1937, 1941; Albin-Michel, 1957, puis 1992);
  • 1938 : Le Bonheur de Barbezieux, dédié à Marcel Arland (Stock, 1938, 1943; Monaco, édit. du Rocher, 1947; Albin-Michel, 1955, Stock, 1980);
  • 1940 : Chronique privée, dédié « à ma fille France » (Stock, 1940);
  • Chronique privée de l'an 40, dédié à Maurice Delamain (id.);
  • 1941 : Voir la Figure - Réflexions sur ce temps, dédié « à mon ami André Thérive (...) souvenirs de l'année 1941 à Paris » (Grasset, 1941);
  • 1941 : Attachements - Chronique privée (Stock, 1941; Albin-Michel, 1955);
  • 1943 : Le Ciel de Nieflheim, 1943. Extraits publiés dans les Cahiers Jacques-Chardonne No. 2 et 3;
  • 1948 : Chimériques (Monaco, édit. du Rocher, 1948 et 1992; Albin-Michel, 1954);
  • 1953 : Vivre à Madère (Grasset, 1953; Albin-Michel, 1954);
  • 1954 : Lettres à Roger Nimier et quelques réponses de Roger Nimier (Grasset, 1954; Albin Michel, 1955, rééd. Albin Michel, 1986)
  • 1956 : Matinales, dédié à André Sabatier (Albin-Michel);
  • 1959 : Le Ciel dans la fenêtre, dédié à Roger Nimier (Albin-Michel, 1959; La Table Ronde, 1998);
  • 1961 : Femmes - contes choisis et quelques images, dédié à Camille Belguise (Albin-Michel);
  • 1962 : Détachements, Paris, édit. td - Jean-Paul Caracalla (1962; Albin-Michel, 1969);
  • 1964 : Demi-jour - suite et fin du Ciel dans la fenêtre (Albin-Michel);
  • 1964 : Catherine (Albin-Michel);
  • 1966 : Propos comme ça (Grasset).

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Jacques Chardonne is the pseudonym of French novelist and essayist Jacques Boutelleau, known for his refined prose style and analyses of love, marriage, and bourgeois life.[1] Born on January 2, 1884, in Barbezieux (now Barbezieux-Saint-Hilaire), Charente, France, he published his debut novel L'Épithalame in 1921, gaining immediate recognition.[1][2] He produced significant works including the novel Claire (1931) and the trilogy Les Destinées sentimentales (1934–1936), as well as essay collections reflecting his introspective approach.[1][2] During World War II, Chardonne supported collaboration with the Vichy regime and Nazi Germany, notably through writings like Chronique privée de l’an 40 and participation in pro-German events, leading to post-war denunciation, brief imprisonment, and a damaged reputation for decades. He died on May 29, 1968, in La Frette-sur-Seine. His work later underwent rehabilitation and is appreciated for its psychological depth and craftsmanship in 20th-century French literature.[2]

Early Life

Birth and Family

Jacques Boutelleau, who would later write under the pen name Jacques Chardonne, was born on January 2, 1884, in Barbezieux-Saint-Hilaire, Charente, France.[3][4] He was the son of a French father and an American mother.[5] He married Anny Antoine.[4]

Education and Early Career

Jacques Boutelleau spent his childhood in Barbezieux, where he formed lasting friendships with members of the Fauconnier and Delamain families, several of whom later pursued literary careers and became founding members of the Académie d’Angoumois.[6] He pursued higher education at the École libre des sciences politiques.[7] Rejecting the prospect of taking over the family cognac business, Boutelleau instead entered the publishing world.[6] He joined the Librairie Stock, progressing successively through roles as secretary, editor, and co-director while serving as a managing shareholder.[7][8] He collaborated notably with Guillaume Apollinaire during this period and later became co-owner of the firm with his childhood friend Maurice Delamain, after which it operated as Delamain et Boutelleau.[7][6] Declared unfit for military service, he did not participate in the First World War.[8] These experiences in the book trade provided the foundation for his eventual transition to writing.

Literary Career

Pseudonym and Early Publications

Jacques Chardonne is the pseudonym of Jacques Boutelleau, adopted during his stay in Switzerland from the name of the village Chardonne-sur-Vevey, where he resided amid health-related travel and began his serious literary efforts.[9][10] Prior to publishing fiction, Boutelleau had established himself in the French publishing world, serving as secretary to publisher P.V. Stock before the First World War.[4][10] His debut novel, L'Épithalame, appeared in 1921 from Librairie Stock and introduced his exploration of intimate relationships.[4][10] This work was followed by other early novels such as Le Chant du bienheureux in 1927 from Delamain et Boutelleau and Les Varais in 1929 from Stock.[4] Chardonne belonged to the informal Groupe de Barbezieux, a loose association of writers from the Charente region including his sister Germaine Boutelleau, Maurice and Jacques Delamain, and Geneviève and Henri Fauconnier, though the group shared geographical ties more than unified literary views.[9] These early publications laid the foundation for his reputation as a novelist focused on subtle personal dynamics.[4]

Major Novels and Themes

Jacques Chardonne's major novels from the interwar period focus on the introspective exploration of love, marriage, and emotional relationships, frequently set in the rural and provincial settings of western France, particularly the Charente region. [11] These works establish him as a novelist of the couple, dissecting the vicissitudes of conjugal life with recurring motifs of doubt, melancholy, and the fleeting nature of happiness. [12] Chardonne's literary style is characterized by precise, limpid prose, extreme clarity, and psychological depth achieved through obsessive rewriting and understatement, producing a crystalline transparency that draws from the moralist tradition. [13] Le Chant du bienheureux (1927) addresses the theme of divorce, examining the dissolution of a marriage and the emotional aftermath in a restrained, introspective manner. [12] Claire (1931) centers on the death of the loved one, portraying the failure of a passionate union haunted by the obsession with mortality and the impossibility of absolute happiness. [12] These novels deepen Chardonne's exploration of love's fragility within marriage, often blending personal introspection with subtle depictions of provincial bourgeois existence. [11] His most ambitious achievement, the trilogy Les Destinées sentimentales (1934–1936), consists of La Femme de Jean Barnery (1934), Pauline (1935), and Le Bonheur de Barbezieux (1936). This historical and intimist fresco explores the sentimental destinies of various characters from bourgeois families in the Charente region involved in cognac and porcelain production, intertwining personal emotional stories with social observation amid the upheavals of the early twentieth century, including the Great War.[14][12] The work is noted for its relatively luminous tone, offering depictions of lasting affection and standing as a rare more optimistic element in Chardonne's otherwise melancholic oeuvre. The work exemplifies his ability to merge psychological insight with broader historical context, reinforcing themes of emotional introspection and the universal complexities of marital love. [13]

Literary Recognition

Jacques Chardonne achieved notable recognition in French literary circles during the interwar period for his elegant prose and subtle depictions of marital and sentimental relationships. His early novel L'Épithalame (1921) attracted considerable attention upon publication and was a strong contender for the Prix Goncourt that year, though it did not ultimately receive the award. [15] Contemporary accounts described much discussion centering on the work, underscoring its impact among critics and readers. [15] Chardonne's reputation was further solidified when his novel Claire (1931) was awarded the Grand Prix du Roman de l'Académie française in 1932. [16] This prestigious honor, accompanied by a prize of 5,000 francs, affirmed his position as a respected novelist within the French literary establishment of the time. [16] His works, including the trilogy Les Destinées sentimentales, were appreciated for their psychological depth and stylistic refinement during his active career.

World War II and Controversies

Political Positions Before and During the War

Jacques Chardonne's political engagements prior to World War II were relatively limited and primarily manifested within literary contexts. He published an antisemitic and anticapitalist article titled "Politique" in the Nouvelle Revue Française in February 1939. [17] Following the French defeat in 1940, Chardonne expressed pro-collaborationist views in his book Chronique privée de l'an 1940, published that year by Stock. [17] In the chapter "L’été à La Maurie" (which initially appeared in the December 1940 issue of the Nouvelle Revue Française under Pierre Drieu la Rochelle's direction), he idealized the stoic acceptance of German occupation by Charente peasants, portraying them as embodying authentic French values amid the presence of German troops. [17] He depicted the occupation as tolerable, suggesting that the French had long been ruled by internal "enemies" in the form of Third Republic politicians, and he highlighted scenes of mutual respect between former World War I combatants, such as a peasant sharing cognac with a German colonel. [17] The work aligned closely with Vichy regime rhetoric, praising Marshal Pétain and the Révolution nationale while defending peasant values, the return to the land, and the motto "Famille, Travail, Patrie." [17] Chardonne advocated for non-liberal regimes, declaring liberalism obsolete and undesirable, as in his statement: "On annonce que cette société ne sera pas libérale. Cela vaut mieux, car elle ne l’était plus du tout." [17] Contemporary observers described the book as the first French-language literary work to idealize the German victory over France from a purportedly French perspective, featuring an acceptance of the defeat and an argument for the domination of Hitler and the Germanic race over Europe. [18] Amid this, Chardonne affirmed the enduring spirit of France despite the circumstances, writing that its essence—its language, society, literature, and popular roots—had persisted for centuries and remained secure "dans la chair même du pays, la texture de son menu peuple." [19] These positions positioned him within collaborationist intellectual circles during the Occupation. [17]

Collaboration Activities

During the German occupation of France, Jacques Chardonne engaged in notable collaborationist activities through his writings, participation in cultural events, and associations with pro-German literary initiatives. His 1940 book Chronique privée de l’an 1940, published by Éditions Stock, openly endorsed Marshal Pétain and the Vichy regime’s Révolution nationale while expressing appreciation for certain regimes previously regarded as oppressive to individual liberty.[17] The volume included an expanded version of his story « Été » (originally published as « L’été à La Maurie »), which idealized the dignified acceptance of defeat by rural French populations and featured a propagandistic scene of Franco-German reconciliation in which a French peasant and a German colonel, both Verdun veterans, share cognac amicably.[17] Chardonne contributed directly to the collaborationist iteration of the Nouvelle Revue Française under director Pierre Drieu la Rochelle by publishing « L’été à La Maurie » in its December 1940 inaugural issue, a text that framed submission to the occupier as honorable and provoked immediate condemnation from figures such as Jean Paulhan and André Gide, with Gide denouncing it publicly in Le Figaro and severing ties with the review.[17] In response to Gide’s critique, Chardonne published the article « Voir la figure » in the June 1941 NRF and expanded it into a 1941 book of the same title with Grasset, where he defended his stance and accused Gide of inconsistency.[17] He regularly attended receptions at the Institut allemand in Paris, a key venue for Franco-German cultural propaganda.[17] Chardonne also participated as a leading member of French delegations to collaborationist intellectual gatherings in Weimar in 1941 and 1942, events designed to foster cultural alignment between France and Germany.[17] In October 1941, he attended the inaugural Congress of the Société européenne des écrivains in Weimar alongside other French writers supportive of European collaboration under German leadership.[20] In 1942, acting on behalf of Pierre Laval’s government, he personally contacted Jean Cocteau to request that Cocteau deliver the opening address at the Paris exhibition of German sculptor Arno Breker, a prominent propaganda event, though Cocteau refused.[21] In 1943, Éditions Stock, where Chardonne exerted significant influence, published a collaborationist Anthologie de la poésie allemande edited by René Lasne and Georg Rabuse.[17]

Post-War Trial and Imprisonment

Following the Liberation of France, Jacques Chardonne was arrested in 1944 in Jarnac due to his wartime collaborationist stance and activities. [22] He was briefly imprisoned as part of the épuration process targeting intellectuals who had supported or engaged with the German occupiers and Vichy regime. [22] During this time, his literary works were banned from publication and distribution in France. [22] The legal proceedings against him concluded in 1946 with a non-lieu, dismissing the case without further action or conviction. [22] This outcome was notably supported by testimony from Jean Paulhan, a prominent figure in literary circles who opposed the purges and advocated for leniency toward writers accused of collaboration. [22] Unlike several other collaborationist writers who faced harsher penalties, Chardonne's relatively brief detention and eventual exoneration allowed him to resume his life and career after the immediate post-war period. [22]

Later Years

Return to Writing

After the Liberation of France, Jacques Chardonne resumed his literary activities, publishing again starting in 1948.[23] The war and its aftermath had interrupted his output, but he returned to writing with renewed focus on introspection and wisdom. In 1948, he released Chimériques, a collection of short stories portraying unusual characters.[23] This was followed in 1953 by Vivre à Madère, in which he reflected on a form of wisdom inspired by his early years in Barbezieux and rediscovered during time spent in Madeira toward the end of his life.[23] In 1956, Matinales appeared, consisting of brief portraits of friends and contemporaries that serve as valuable documents for understanding individuals affected by historical upheavals.[23] From the 1950s onward, Chardonne's writing evolved toward greater interiority and the pursuit of wisdom, even as younger writers associated with the Hussards movement claimed him as a master of style.[23] He also brought to completion the long essay L’amour c’est beaucoup plus que l’amour, spanning from 1937 to 1957.[23] Subsequent works included Le Ciel dans la fenêtre (1959), a series of character depictions drawn from personal acquaintances and social encounters.[24] In 1964, he published Demi-jour as a continuation and conclusion to that work. Later publications featured reflections and fragments, such as Propos comme ça in 1966, issued when Chardonne was eighty-two years old.[25] His correspondence with contemporaries like Roger Nimier and Paul Morand, conducted during these years, also formed an important part of his late literary activity, though much of it was published posthumously.[23]

Death

Jacques Chardonne died on May 29, 1968, in La Frette-sur-Seine, France, at the age of 84. [2] [26] He had resided in the town since 1926, in a villa bearing his name that was built according to his specifications. [9] No specific cause of death is reported in available biographical sources. [2] He was buried in the cemetery of La Frette-sur-Seine. [27]

Legacy

Influence on Literature

Jacques Chardonne's most notable literary influence appears in his role as a spiritual father to the post-war group known as Les Hussards, alongside Paul Morand.[28] Writers including Roger Nimier, Antoine Blondin, Michel Déon, and Jacques Laurent viewed him as a tutelary figure, admiring his refined neoclassical style, sober prose, and deep psychological insight into love and the couple.[7] His emphasis on the intimate tragedies of domestic life, the fragility of relationships, and the moral dimensions of sentiment provided a model for their non-conformist, right-leaning approach to fiction.[7][29] Chardonne's major novels, such as Les Destinées sentimentales, L'Épithalame, and Claire, explored themes of provincial bourgeois existence in settings like the Charente region, with meticulous attention to introspection, the nuances of marriage, and the centrality of love as the ultimate human value amid social conventions and economic realities.[8][28] His writing—marked by concision, clarity, aphoristic precision, and a discreet narrator—captured the subtle shifts of emotion and the ordinary tragedies of the couple, establishing him as one of the 20th century's keenest commentators on modern love and personal destiny.[7][8] Posthumously, despite long periods of marginalization linked to his wartime positions, Chardonne's reputation has seen reappraisals that affirm his importance as a moralist novelist in the classical French tradition, one who bridged the post-Proust era with a subtle, aristocratic portrayal of happiness, misfortune, and sentimental introspection in provincial life.[8][7] His legacy endures through recognition of his rigorous prose and enduring reflections on the primacy of love and human relationships.[28][29]

Film and Television Adaptations

Several of Jacques Chardonne's novels have been adapted into film and television posthumously. [4] His 1931 novel Claire was adapted into a French television film in 1986 directed by Lazare Iglesis. [4] [30] Chardonne's major work Les Destinées sentimentales (published 1934–1936) was adapted into the 2000 French period drama Les Destinées (international title Sentimental Destinies), directed by Olivier Assayas from a screenplay he co-wrote with Jacques Fieschi. [31] [32] The film stars Charles Berling as Jean Barnery, Emmanuelle Béart as Pauline, and Isabelle Huppert as Nathalie Barnery, and it was selected for official competition at the 2000 Cannes Film Festival. [31] These adaptations represent the primary cinematic engagements with Chardonne's prose, focusing on his explorations of bourgeois life and emotional complexities. [4] [31]

Critical Reappraisal

Critical Reappraisal In the decades following his death, Jacques Chardonne's literary standing has been subject to renewed interest and debate, particularly around the tension between his stylistic achievements and his political compromises during the Occupation. [33] Several publications and reissues, notably around the fiftieth anniversary of his death in 2018, have advocated for rereading his works, arguing that his precise classical prose and acute observations of love and marriage retain value independent of his past. [29] Critics highlight his mastery in depicting the duration of relationships, the compromises of married life, and the subtle tensions of provincial existence, as seen in Les Destinées sentimentales, which some describe as his most ambitious and contemporary novel for its portrayal of love as a difficult, non-possessive conquest. [33] [29] His sober, understated style—marked by clarity, economy, and understatement—has been praised as a model of neoclassical French prose that offers timeless insights into human intimacy. [7] This reevaluation often emphasizes a separation between the man and the artist, with supporters contending that Chardonne's collaborationist involvement, including his participation in writers' trips to Germany and certain pro-German texts, represents only a limited part of a life dedicated to writing. [29] His influence on the postwar Hussard movement, through figures like Roger Nimier, has also been cited as evidence of his enduring aesthetic legacy, inspiring a current of elegant, ironic, and individualist literature. [33] Republications of his correspondence with Paul Morand and other works have been framed as signs of a maturing cultural climate capable of confronting such texts critically, with annotations to contextualize their controversial elements. [34] [35] However, academic analyses have scrutinized the mechanisms of this rehabilitation, noting that appeals to "style" as an overriding virtue—exemplified by Chardonne's own assertion that "if a writer has style, what he says has no importance"—served as a postwar strategy to downplay political responsibility among compromised right-wing authors. [36] This approach, prominent in the 1950s among younger writers promoting figures like Chardonne, has been critiqued as a way to prioritize form over content and to relativize ideological commitments. [37] While some view the limited reception of his postwar works as partly aesthetic rather than purely punitive, debates persist over whether his collaborationist past should temper appreciation of his oeuvre or if critical rereading can legitimately isolate literary merit. [37] [36] The ongoing discussion reflects broader questions in French literary history about accountability, aesthetics, and the ethics of engaging with politically tainted writers.

References

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