Roger Martin du Gard
Roger Martin du Gard (
March 23,
1881 –
August 22,
1958) was a French author and winner of the 1937
Nobel Prize for Literature.
Trained as a
paleographer and
archivist, Martin du Gard brought to his works a spirit of objectivity and a scrupulous regard for details. For his concern with documentation and with the relationship of social reality to individual development, he has been linked with the realist and
naturalist traditions of the 19th century.
Roger Martin du Gard died in 1958 and was buried in the Cimiez Monastery Cemetery in
Cimiez, a suburb of the city of
Nice, France.
Martin du Gard first attracted attention with
Jean Barois (
1913), which traced the development of an intellectual torn between the
Roman Catholic faith of his childhood and the
scientific materialism of his maturity; it also described the full impact of the
Dreyfus affair on French minds.
He is best known for the eight-part
novel cycle Les Thibault (
1922-
1940; parts 1-6 as
The Thibaults; parts 7-8 as
Summer 1914). This record of a family's development chronicles the social and moral issues confronting the French
bourgeoisie from the turn of the 19th century to
World War I. Reacting against a bourgeois patriarch, the younger son, Jacques, after experiencing abuse in a Boys' Reformatory, renounces his Roman Catholic past to embrace revolutionary
socialism, and the elder son, Antoine, accepts his middle-class heritage but loses faith in its religious foundation. Both sons eventually die in World War I. The outstanding features of
Les Thibaults are the wide range of human relationships patiently explored, the graphic realism of the sickbed and death scenes, and, in the seventh volume,
L'Été 1914 ("Summer 1914"), the dramatic description of Europe's nations being swept into war.
Other works by Martin du Gard include
Vielle France (
1933;
The Postman), biting sketches of French country life, and
Notes sur André Gide (
1951;
Recollections of Andre Gide), a candid study of the author, who was his friend. Martin du Gard also wrote a somber drama about repressed
homosexuality,
Un Taciturne (
1931;
A Silent Man), and two farces of French peasant life,
Le Testament du père Leleu (
1914;
Old Leleu's Will) and
La Gonfle (
1928;
The Swelling). In
1941 he began work on
Le Journal du colonel de Maumort, a vast novel that he hoped would prove to be his masterpiece, but it was still unfinished at his death.
* This article incorporates material from [
1], available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.