Tchen's Sacred Isolation—Prelude to Malraux's Fraternal Humanism

While Malraux's life-long quest was to seek new values in man's perennial and shared struggle against an overwhelming fate, his early protagonist, particularly the assassin, turns to destruction and terrorism in a frenzied search for absolutes. This attempt to identify with the very fatali...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Roch C. Smith
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: New Prairie Press 1982-09-01
Series:Studies in 20th & 21st Century Literature
Online Access:http://newprairiepress.org/sttcl/vol7/iss1/5
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spelling doaj-efef69ba9dfc4397aaeddbbaaafe21c42020-11-24T23:05:52ZengNew Prairie PressStudies in 20th & 21st Century Literature2334-44151982-09-017110.4148/2334-4415.11145580363Tchen's Sacred Isolation—Prelude to Malraux's Fraternal HumanismRoch C. SmithWhile Malraux's life-long quest was to seek new values in man's perennial and shared struggle against an overwhelming fate, his early protagonist, particularly the assassin, turns to destruction and terrorism in a frenzied search for absolutes. This attempt to identify with the very fatality that has the power to destroy him is especially developed in Tchen, who embodies a despairing fascination with totalistic nihilism that Malraux must overcome in his search for a new notion of man. Tchen's initiation to murder in La Condition humaine marks a transgression of a taboo that thrusts him into what Georges Bataille calls the realm of the "sacred." His attempt to reconcile life and death by identifying with his victim irredeemably isolates Tchen from other, uninitiated men. Transformed by murder, he leaves the reality of revolution for the inhuman world of cosmic existence and individual death. Seeking to escape the human condition, he becomes obsessed with killing Chang-Kai-shek in order to kill himself and thereby "possess" his fate. But the illusion of such an escape dies with Tchen. Even his admiring disciples repudiate his nihilistic temptation as Malraux begins to seek in human fraternity the foundations of a new humanism.http://newprairiepress.org/sttcl/vol7/iss1/5
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Roch C. Smith
spellingShingle Roch C. Smith
Tchen's Sacred Isolation—Prelude to Malraux's Fraternal Humanism
Studies in 20th & 21st Century Literature
author_facet Roch C. Smith
author_sort Roch C. Smith
title Tchen's Sacred Isolation—Prelude to Malraux's Fraternal Humanism
title_short Tchen's Sacred Isolation—Prelude to Malraux's Fraternal Humanism
title_full Tchen's Sacred Isolation—Prelude to Malraux's Fraternal Humanism
title_fullStr Tchen's Sacred Isolation—Prelude to Malraux's Fraternal Humanism
title_full_unstemmed Tchen's Sacred Isolation—Prelude to Malraux's Fraternal Humanism
title_sort tchen's sacred isolation—prelude to malraux's fraternal humanism
publisher New Prairie Press
series Studies in 20th & 21st Century Literature
issn 2334-4415
publishDate 1982-09-01
description While Malraux's life-long quest was to seek new values in man's perennial and shared struggle against an overwhelming fate, his early protagonist, particularly the assassin, turns to destruction and terrorism in a frenzied search for absolutes. This attempt to identify with the very fatality that has the power to destroy him is especially developed in Tchen, who embodies a despairing fascination with totalistic nihilism that Malraux must overcome in his search for a new notion of man. Tchen's initiation to murder in La Condition humaine marks a transgression of a taboo that thrusts him into what Georges Bataille calls the realm of the "sacred." His attempt to reconcile life and death by identifying with his victim irredeemably isolates Tchen from other, uninitiated men. Transformed by murder, he leaves the reality of revolution for the inhuman world of cosmic existence and individual death. Seeking to escape the human condition, he becomes obsessed with killing Chang-Kai-shek in order to kill himself and thereby "possess" his fate. But the illusion of such an escape dies with Tchen. Even his admiring disciples repudiate his nihilistic temptation as Malraux begins to seek in human fraternity the foundations of a new humanism.
url http://newprairiepress.org/sttcl/vol7/iss1/5
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