Past Tense : The Cocteau Diaries Volume 1 by Jean Cocteau (1988, Trade Paperback)

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By Cocteau, Jean. Format: Paperback or Softback. Your Privacy. ISBN: 9780156713603. Condition Guide. Item Availability.

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Product Identifiers

PublisherHarperCollins
ISBN-100156713608
ISBN-139780156713603
eBay Product ID (ePID)67229

Product Key Features

Book TitlePast Tense : the Cocteau Diaries Volume 1
Number of Pages352 Pages
LanguageEnglish
TopicRich & Famous, European / French, Diaries & Journals, Literary
Publication Year1988
IllustratorYes
GenreLiterary Criticism, Biography & Autobiography, Literary Collections
AuthorJean Cocteau
FormatTrade Paperback

Dimensions

Item Height0.9 in
Item Weight12.9 Oz
Item Length8.2 in
Item Width5.5 in

Additional Product Features

Intended AudienceTrade
LCCN86-012060
ReviewsFor the last 13 years of his life Cocteau kept a diary, the existence of which was revealed only recently. This first in a projected series of volumes runs from the middle of 1951 through 1952, and finds him installed in a friend's villa on the Riviera. Fresh from the triumph of his finest work, the movie Orpheus , Cocteau maintains a prodigious level of activity: preparing a new play for production, shooting a "private film" for his hostess, lecturing, painting, dashing off articles. Too self-absorbed to chronicle his times, this most protean of writers instead chronicled himselfwith results that will nevertheless interest any student of his era.Grove Koger, Boise P.L., Id., Covering 1951-1952, this first publication in English of part of Cocteau's diaries chronicles what he was reading and writing; his activities as a poet, playwright, painter, filmmaker, designer of mosaics and tapestries; the people he saw (Colette in a wheelchair, Garbo in a restaurant, Matisse receiving acupuncture in bed) and those he dined with (Picasso and Stravinsky, the two men who had the greatest influence on him). Overwhelmed by requests, suffering constantly from an inflamed hand, Cocteau worked on a play (Bacchus, an oratorio text for Hindemith and drawings for Radiguet's novels, and traveled to Germany, Greece and Vienna. He comments on the abdication of King Farouk, lauds the novels of Dumas, criticizes Sartre's book on Genet ("The last chapters sink into a disgusting mud"), evaluates Maugham's success (it "comes from the fact that he writes on the level of the public. Nothing underneath. Nothing behind"), castigates Chagall and Soutine ("There is a collective hypnosis here and a taste for a certain 'subjective' scribbling"). His long reflections on Proust alone make the diary worth reading. First serial to the New York Times Book Review.
Dewey Edition19
Volume NumberVol. 1
Dewey Decimal848/.91203 B
Table Of ContentIntroduction vii Note xix The Diaries: July 16, 1951 - December 28, 1952 1 Translator's Note 351 Works 357 Index 363
SynopsisJean Cocteau delighted in shocking the world. In pubic, at least, the image he presented was one of great daring -- a man eager to defy, willing to experiment, ready to challenge. Cocteau's achievements in almost every artistic medium -- including poetry, film, illustration, criticism, and ballet -- rightfully earned him a reputation for radical versatility. He assumed Oscar Wilde's role as "world's most dazzling talker" and Thomas DeQuincey's as "world's most conspicuous opium addict"; he drew depictions of his bouts in the all-male brothels of Toulon; he created the actor Jean Marais and the chanteuse Edith Piaf. But among Cocteau's many accomplishments was one composition protected by the private man: his diary. Recorded during the last 13 years of his life, Cocteau's diary was kept a secret until 1983. this first of six projected volumes reveals Cocteau's life from 1951 to 1953. In it, he makes asides about Picasso, writes Oedipus rex, admires Stalin, travels through Europe, and engages in gross generalizations about Americans. With line drawings from Cocteau's original journal, Past Tense is a literary event -- a window into Cocteau's life and creativity as he wanted them to be remembered.

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