The Age of Reason (Sartre)

The Age of Reason (French: L'âge de raison) is a 1945 novel by Jean Paul Sartre. It is the first part of the trilogy The Roads to Freedom. The novel, set in the bohemian Paris of the late 1930s, focuses on three days in the life of a philosophy teacher named Mathieu who is seeking money to pay for an abortion for his mistress, Marcelle. Sartre analyses the motives of various characters and their actions and takes into account the perceptions of others to give the reader a comprehensive picture of the main character.

The Age of Reason is concerned with Sartre's conception of freedom as the ultimate aim of human existence. This work seeks to illustrate the existentialist notion of ultimate freedom through presenting a detailed account of the characters' psychologies as they are forced to make significant decisions in their lives. As the novel progresses, character narratives espouse Sartre's view of what it means to be free and how one operates within the framework of society with this philosophy. This novel is a fictional reprise of some of the main themes in his major philosophical study Being and Nothingness. One of the notions is that ultimately a person's freedom is unassailable as it is fundamentally part of the nothingness that is the imagination and so cannot be taken away or destroyed.


Works by Jean-Paul Sartre
Novels
  • Nausea
  • The Wall
  • The Age of Reason

The Reprieve

  • Troubled Sleep
  • The Chips Are Down
Plays
  • The Flies
  • No Exit
  • Morts sans sépulture
  • The Respectful Prostitute
  • Dirty Hands
  • "Orphée Noir"
  • The Devil and the Good Lord
  • The Condemned of Altona
Philosophical treatises
  • The Transcendence of the Ego
  • Sketch for a Theory of the Emotions
  • Being and Nothingness
  • Existentialism and Humanism
  • Existentialism and Human Emotions
  • Search for a Method
  • Critique of Dialectical Reason
Non-fiction
  • Anti-Semite and Jew
  • What Is Literature?
  • Baudelaire (book)
  • Situations (essay series)
  • The Words
  • The Family Idiot
Related topics
  • Authenticity
  • Bad faith (mauvaise foi)
  • Existence precedes essence

Famous quotes containing the word age:

    No such sermons have come to us here out of England, in late years, as those of this preacher,—sermons to kings, and sermons to peasants, and sermons to all intermediate classes. It is in vain that John Bull, or any of his cousins, turns a deaf ear, and pretends not to hear them: nature will not soon be weary of repeating them. There are words less obviously true, more for the ages to hear, perhaps, but none so impossible for this age not to hear.
    Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)