Journal of European Studies
Jean-Paul Sartre, John Steinbeck and
the liability of liberty in the post-war period
BRADLEY STEPHENS
University of Bristol
The polarities of the Cold War impelled many intellectuals on
both sides of the Atlantic to take sides either with capitalism or
communism. Both Jean-Paul Sartre and John Steinbeck famously
attempted to respond to this ideological choice and would differ in
their political leanings: Sartre was an outspoken critic of American
capitalist hegemony, whereas Steinbeck became an avid opponent
of the communist bloc. They nonetheless shared a dedication to
engaging with the social issues of their time, becoming arguably
the pre-eminent proletarian writers of the period and eventual
Nobel Prize winners. Sartre believed Steinbeck to be ‘the most
rebellious, perhaps’ of American writers, whilst Steinbeck so
admired the French intellectual scene typified by Sartre that he
spent nearly a year in Paris writing for Le Figaro. Their pivotal
promotion of individual freedom may have nudged them towards
both ends of the political spectrum respectively; yet their emphasis
on the changeability of human existence constantly destabilized
any position they approached. In this article I argue for a pro-
ductive return to their writing in order to underline the
alternations both encounter when seeking to put the libertarian
ideal of individuality into practice. In their novels L’Âge de raison
(1945) and East of Eden (1952), as well as in their journals, we can
observe how their mutual emphasis on man’s indeterminism as
an autonomous subject inevitably dissolves the foundation of any
normative political ethos. As such, it is crucial to reiterate that their
engagement with the post-war period in fact deeply complicates
the drive for totalization and systemization implied in the strict
allegiances of the Cold War political terrain.
Journal of European Studies 38(2): 177–192 Copyright © SAGE Publications (Los Angeles, London,
New Delhi and Singapore) http://jes.sagepub.com [200806] 0047-2441/10.1177/0047244108090209
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