Joy of Man's Desiring

(Redirected from Que ma joie demeure)

Joy of Man's Desiring (French: Que ma joie demeure) is a 1936 novel by the French writer Jean Giono. The story takes place in an early 20th-century farmer's community in southern France, where the inhabitants suffer from a mysterious disease, while a healer tries to save them by teaching the value of joy. The title is taken from Johann Sebastian Bach's chorale Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring.[1] An English translation by Katherine Allen Clarke was published in 1940.[2]

Joy of Man's Desiring
Title page for Joy of Man's Desiring (English language edition from 1940 of Que ma joie demeure)
AuthorJean Giono
Original titleQue ma joie demeure
TranslatorKatherine Allen Clarke
LanguageFrench
PublisherÉditions Grasset
Publication date
1936
Publication placeFrance
Published in English
1940
Pages493

Reception

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Isabella W. Athey of The Saturday Review described Giono's novel as "an expression of his revolt against the effects of industrial materialism, more poetical and radical than any garden-city retreat from urban life. His territory is whole forests, whole plateaux, and this intensity perhaps explains why he is frequently described as a pagan." Athey continued: "The term seems inexact as well as inadequate, for the only pagan world with which the average reader is familiar is that of Greek and Roman cultures, and the classical values, clear even at second and third hand of organic restraint, of rationalistic emphasis on cause and effect, have no bearing upon Giono's code which is, at bottom, a refusal to compromise. This quality constitutes his originality, both as a man of beliefs and as a novelist. It leads also to some of his weaknesses, carelessness in characterization, for instance, and disregard for motivation beyond his personal intuition."[3]

References

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  1. ^ Lorre Goodrich, Norma (1973). Giono: Master of Fictional Modes. Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press. p. 8. ISBN 0-691-06239-0.
  2. ^ Joy of man's desiring. OCLC 994288. Retrieved 2015-03-03 – via WorldCat.
  3. ^ Athey, Isabella W. (1940-06-22). "Communal Revolt". The Saturday Review. p. 6.