Robert Sayre brings a special kind of literary intelligence to
his study of the problem of isolation in modern society. He gives
us a spirited instance of a sociological approach to literature,
more specifically a Marxist approach that forcefully links a
literary theme to a social fact. In contrast to the existentialist
interpretation of alienation (in which isolation is the eternal
dilemma of Man), a Marxist analysis interprets solitude in society
as precisely a modern phenomenon, directly related to the evolution
of advanced capitalism.
Sayre first discusses the notion of solitude as it is treated
in classical literature and carries it through to the nineteenth
century, with emphasis on the literary history of France. In the
second part of the book he presents detailed interpretations of
five twentieth-century French novels (by Proust, Malraux, Bernanos,
Camus, and Sarraute). Controversial, but persuasive, these in-depth
studies are certain to influence the reader's way of looking at the
writers in question.
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