Louis-Ferdinand Céline

born May
27, 1894, Courbevoie, near Paris, France
died July 1, 1961, Meudon
French
writer and physician who, while admired for
his talent, is better known for his
anti-Semitism and misanthropy.
Céline
received his medical degree in 1924 and
traveled extensively on medical missions for
the League of Nations. In 1928 he opened a
practice in a suburb of Paris, writing in
his spare time. He became famous with his
first novel, Voyage au bout de la nuit
(1932; Journey to the End of Night), the
story of a man’s tortured and hopeless
search for meaning, written in a vehement
and disjointed style that marked its author
as a major innovator of 20th-century French
literature. There followed Mort à crédit
(1936; Death on the Installment Plan), a
similarly bleak portrayal of a world bereft
of value, beauty, and decency.
Though a
favourite of the left wing, Céline was
disenchanted by a visit to the Soviet Union
and said so in Mea Culpa (1937). He later
developed fanatically anti-Semitic
sentiments, expressed in three notorious
pamphlets: Bagatelles pour un massacre
(1937; “Trifles for a Massacre”), L’École
des cadavres (1938; “School for Corpses”),
and Les Beaux Draps (1941; “The Fine Mess”).
These works also attacked the French.
At the
outbreak of World War II, Céline enlisted in
the ambulance service, but after the fall of
France in 1940 he rejected both
collaboration and resistance and returned
instead to work at a dispensary at Bezons.
Fearing that he would be charged with
collaboration, he fled during the Allied
liberation of France to Denmark via Germany,
which was then undergoing the height of the
Allied bombing campaigns. In Denmark he was
imprisoned for more than a year after French
officials charged him with collaboration and
demanded his extradition. He returned to
France in 1951 after a military tribunal in
Paris granted him amnesty. On his return, he
resumed the practice of medicine and
continued to write. His last works, a
trilogy composed of D’un Château l’autre
(1957; Castle to Castle), Nord (1960;
North), and Rigodon (1969; Rigadoon), depict
World War II as seen from within Germany;
they are viewed by some critics as equal in
power and style to his two celebrated early
novels. Other works include Guignol’s Band
(1944), Casse Pipe (1949; “Shooting
Gallery”), and Entretiens avec le Professeur
Y (1955; “Conversations with Professor Y”).
During the
1930s Céline enjoyed a high reputation, but
it diminished during and after the war years
because of his increasingly vicious and
hysterical misanthropy. The relentless
despair, amorality, rage, and eroticism of
his works continue to disturb some critics,
who object to his underlying viewpoint even
when they praise his apocalyptic lyricism.
Other critics find a paradoxical humanism in
Céline’s agonized rhetoric and interpret his
ravings as a revolt against the world’s
intolerable evil.