In full:
Albertine Simonet

Albertine, fictional character, the mistress of Marcel, narrator of À la recherche du temps perdu (1913–27; Remembrance of Things Past, or In Search of Lost Time) by Marcel Proust. She appears in several volumes of the seven-part novel, notably À l’ombre des jeunes filles en fleurs (1919; Within a Budding Grove), Sodome et Gomorrhe (1921–22; Sodom and Gomorrah), and La Prisonnière (1923; The Captive).

Albertine Simonet and Marcel (Proust gives no surname to the character) meet at Balbec, a seaside resort, when she is a young girl and then again when she is a sophisticated young woman. Although they live together in Paris, she engages in clandestine lesbian affairs. Marcel is obsessively possessive of Albertine, demands her complete attention, and is tortured by suspicions of her affairs. Unable to bear his jealousy, Albertine goes to Touraine. Marcel feels he cannot live without her and writes her, begging for her return. He receives a letter from her aunt, informing him that Albertine was killed in an accidental fall from a horse.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Amy Tikkanen.
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In Search of Lost Time

novel by Proust
Also known as: “À la recherche du temps perdu”, “Remembrance of Things Past”
Also translated as:
Remembrance of Things Past

In Search of Lost Time, novel in seven parts by Marcel Proust, published in French as À la recherche du temps perdu from 1913 to 1927. The novel is the story of Proust’s own life, told as an allegorical search for truth. It is the major work of French fiction of the early 20th century.

In January 1909 Proust experienced the involuntary recall of a childhood memory when he tasted a rusk (a twice-baked bread, which in his novel became a madeleine) dipped in tea. In July he retired from the world to write his novel, finishing the first draft in September 1912. The first volume, Du côté de chez Swann (Swann’s Way also translated as The Way by Swann’s), was refused on several occasions but was finally issued at the author’s expense in November 1913. Proust at this time planned only two further volumes.

During the war years he revised the remainder of his novel, enriching and deepening its feeling, texture, and construction, enhancing the realistic and satirical elements, and tripling its length. In so doing he transformed it into one of the most profound achievements of the human imagination. In June 1919 À l’ombre des jeunes filles en fleurs (Within a Budding Grove, also published as In the Shadow of Young Girls in Flower) appeared simultaneously with a reprint of Swann. In December 1919 À l’ombre received the Prix Goncourt, and Proust suddenly became world famous. Two more installments appeared in his lifetime and had the benefit of his final revision: Le Côté de Guermantes (1920; The Guermantes Way) and Sodome et Gomorrhe (1921; Cities of the Plain, or Sodom and Gomorrah). The last three parts of À la recherche were published posthumously in an advanced but not final stage of revision: La Prisonnière (1923; The Captive), Albertine disparue (1925; The Sweet Cheat Gone, originally called La Fugitive), and Le Temps retrouvé (1927; Time Regained, or Finding Time Again). The first authoritative edition of the entire work was published in 1954.

Portrait of young thinking bearded man student with stack of books on the table before bookshelves in the library
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The novel begins with the middle-aged narrator’s memories of his happy childhood. The narrator tells the story of his life, introducing along the way a series of memorable characters, among them Charles Swann, who forms a stormy alliance with the prostitute Odette; their daughter, Gilberte Swann, with whom young Marcel falls in love; the aristocratic Guermantes family, including the dissolute Baron de Charlus and his nephew Robert de Saint-Loup; and Albertine, to whom Marcel forms a passionate attachment. Marcel’s world expands to encompass both the cultivated and the corrupt, and he sees the full range of human folly and misery. At his lowest ebb, he feels that time is lost; beauty and meaning have faded from all he ever pursued and won; and he renounces the book he has always hoped to write. At a reception after the war, the narrator realizes, through a series of incidents of unconscious memory, that all the beauty he has experienced in the past is eternally alive. Time is regained, and he sets to work, racing against death, to write the very novel the reader has just experienced. In his quest for time lost, he invented nothing but altered everything, selecting, fusing, and transmuting the facts so that their underlying unity and universal significance would be revealed.

This article was most recently revised and updated by J.E. Luebering.
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