Diario
- 344 páginas
- 13 horas de lectura
André Gide fue un autor francés cuya obra abarcó desde el simbolismo hasta el anticolonialismo. Su ficción y escritos autobiográficos exponen el conflicto entre su educación y las restricciones sociales. La obra de Gide explora la libertad y el empoderamiento frente a las limitaciones moralistas, impulsada por su búsqueda de honestidad intelectual. Sus textos autoexploratorios reflejan la búsqueda de una identidad auténtica, abrazando todos los aspectos de la naturaleza sin comprometer los valores.







A landmark in world literature, Strait is the Gate describes a love affair between an acutely sensitive boy growing up in Paris and his cousin from the Normandy countryside that erupts into a soul-endangering passion. A devastating exploration of aestheticism taken to extremes, Strait is the Gate is a novel of haunting beauty that stimulates the mind and the emotions.A serious purpose underlies the work of Gide, and it is from such purposes that great novelists arise. - The New York TimesA little masterpiece.... as fine as a spire on Notre Dame. - James Joyce
Shatters various images of Andre Gide as the querulous and impious Buddha to a quarter-century of intellectuals.
During the author's travels, he meets Menalcas, a caricature of Oscar Wilde, who relates his fantastic life story. But for all his brilliance, Menalcas is only Gide's yesterday self, a discarded wraith who leaves Gide free to stop exalting the ego and embrace bodily and spiritual joy.
Theseus, mythical hero of Athens, narrates his life story in an existential vacuum following the failure of his marriages, the death of his son, Hippolytus, his own famous exploits a distant memory. Tragedy punctuates this narrative, as it does his drama, Oedipus, also published here, both works elaborating through myth an unanswerable search for self.
Michel had been a blindfold scholar until, newly married, he contracted tuberculosis. His will to recover brings self-discovery and the growing desire to rebel against his background of culture, decency and morality. But the freedom from constraints that Michel finds on his restless travels is won at great cost.