I ARTS Page 6 The Michigan Daily Thursday, February 10, 1983 Books By Ben Ticho1 Simone de Beauvoir-'When Things of the Spirit Come First' Random House, 212 PP. THE MOST distinguishing feature of this newly-translated collection of five early stories by Simone de Beauvoir, the grand femme of Existentialism, is its unashamed use of autobiographical material. De Beauvoir is perhaps best known for her lifelong association with Jean-Paul Sar- tre, as well as for her pioneering work for her gender, exemplified in her ram- bling masterwork, The Second Sex. De Beauvoir has always felt it her prime duty, desire, and destiny, however, to tell her own story, to give posterity a true look at a modern woman's evolution out of the restric- tive, sheltered world of the French middle class into the challenging domain and responsibility of indepen- dence, freedom, and intellectual creation. To that end she wrote Memoirs of a Dutiful Daughter, an utterly frank, even matter-of-fact, account of her life through age 20. Published in 1958, the Parisian describes her years of piety and obedience, growing disatisfaction with formal education and sexual mores, and, finally, open rebellion against the Catholicism and constrictin g values espoused by her parents and teachers. ".4 De Beau voir ... feels spirit first Written just before age thirty (mid 1930s), Quand Prime le Spirituel was originally rejected by the publishing house of Grasset. In fact, French publication waited until 1979; nonetheless, the collection remains an illuminating forerunner of de Beauvoir's more advanced later work and a valuable source for looking at her physical and spiritual past. Each of the five stories focuses on a single heroine, who donates her name to the title: Marcelle, Chantal, Lisa, Anne, and Marguerite. In each charac- ter, de Beauvoir infuses her memory of past acquaintances and at- mospheres ... and bits of herself as well. "Marcelle" concerns a you:ngwoman convinced of her own genius and virtue, as proved by an enormous self-ascribed capacity for sacrifice. She helps organize a social club, devoted to bringing "culture" to the youth of the area, or rather, to bring them "up to culture." More than her social am- bitions, Marcelle is anxious to find a man worthy of her sacrifice. Desroches, one of the club's founders, brings her equal selflessness, idealism, and reverance for the spirituality (as opposed to physicality) of marriage, and they are engaged. But, as happens throughout the collection, Marcelle tires of the "com- monplace," tires of Desroches, and gives up her club activities and marries a somewhat daring young poet, Denis. Their union is marked by the pleasure Marcelle receives in "giving" herself to her husband, more in the debasement of the act than its sensuousness, and the inevitable disappointment of Mar- celle's idyllic conception of Denis, who writes less and less, squanders money in bistros, and finally leaves her for another woman. Although de Beauvoir claims in her preface to have modelled Marcelle af- ter a schoolgirl she once taught, details and traits from her own life show through. She herself once instructed working girls in literature as part of an "Equipes sociales" program. Fur- thermore, the idea that the coarse, small-minded world does not ap- preciate properly her talents and poten- tial is amply expressed in Memoirs of a Dutiful Daughter. Here, de Beauvoir accepts her own "bad faith"; she seeks to alleviate her responsibility by con- demning a situation which (she claims) she can do little to control. The other entries in Things of the Spirit contain variations of the same theme: talented, and less talented, women struggle to assert their individuality, to "transcend," with their own false visions of happiness often equal enemies with the bourgeois mentality they all resent. Seldom understood, they strive at any costs (as Marcelle does) to maintain their self-esteem, while, with a few exceptions, resigning themselves to the place society accords them. "Chantal" is the collection's most vivid presentation of "bad faith." Chantal, a provincial schoolteacher, goes to great pains to assure herself and others of her "difference." She presumes to judge her stuffy school associates as well as her pupils, delegating some to aesthetic "promise" and others to eternal boredom. In the end, however, she cannot keep up the pretense of sen- sitivity, as she betrays the trust of a girl with "promise" who has become pregnant. Chantal is a clever hybrid of Jean Brodie and Willa Cather's Paul, caught up in middle class morality bat- tles while considering herself above them. Unfortunately, "Anne," and the rest of Things of the Spirit, while pointed and earnest, reads too much like an ad- vanced soap opera. De Beauvoir her- self freely admits the heaviness and awkwardness of what she calls a "beginners's piece." She recommends Memoirs for a more faithful portrait of Zaza, as well as of Jacques Laiguillon, the cousin de Beauvoir almost married and who is loosely personified in the wild and often self-indulgent Denis. It was Jacques who introduced de Beauvoir to the exhiliration and daring of the little bars which populated Paris in the 1920s. Similarly, Denis buys Marguerite her first gin fizz in the collection's final and probably most successful story. Marguerite resem- bles her author more than any of the other women, for she escapes from the trap of what de Beauvoir calls "the wonderful" and "looks the world in the face." When she wrote Things of the Spirit, de Beauvoir was just such a woman who, having extricated herself from an oppressive past, looks the world in the face, and revels in her newfound freedom. This happiness, however, caused problems in her writing, as she recognized in Force of Circumstance. De Beauvoir had promised herself she would "tell all," but in her exuberance she found she had lost her subject: "Emerging from boredom and bondage of my childhood years, I was overwhelmed, stunned, blinded with joy. How could I have found in my happiness an urge to escape from it? My plans for work remained empty dreams until the day when my hap- piness was threatened, and I rediscovered in solitude a certain kind of anxiety." The difficulties emerge in her stories. Even given the biographical context; the schoolgirl romances and torments come off more as sentimental reminiscenses than the work of 0 mature writer. De Beauvoir attempts different style spproaches-there is Chantal's diary and the confession of Anne's mother-but she seems too ofte detached, blunt, and awkward. Some have complained about a lacy of feeling in de Beauvoir's writings; with understanding; from L'Invitee onward, she strove more for accuracy than emotion with what Henri Peyre calls an "abhorrence of mysticism." Not that her writing is cold, only distant; there is always the awareness of judgement, as there is in Sartre's fic- tion. Despite these deficiencies, de Beauvoir succeeds in her principal aim-to show the oppressiveness of French society between the wars and the difficulty in establishing individual integrity. Francois Mauriac's Therese Desqueyroux is a far more subtle, com- plex, and developed victim then are Anne and the others. 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