https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8713-0021
Anna HanoSe‐Zawiślak est doctorante en littérature comparée à Sorbonne Université (Paris), rattachée au Centre de Recherche en Littérature Comparée (CRLC). Sa thèse, sous la direction de M. Bernard Franco, porte sur l’apparition des personnages d’arrivistes dans les romans français, polonais et anglais du XIXe siècle.
Anna Hanotte‐Zawiślak
Cahiers ERTA, Numéro 18, 2019, pp. 9 - 23
https://doi.org/10.4467/23538953CE.19.010.10695The “mandarin paradox” is a famous philosophical problem, mentioned in Balzac’s Père Goriot. It takes the form of a question: “what [would you] do if [you] could make a fortune by killing an old mandarin somewhere in China by mere force of wishing it, and without stirring from Paris ?” This paradox examines our conscience and the moral ability to bear an unpunished crime. Balzac, and other writers after him, wrongfully attributed this problem to Jean‐Jacques Rousseau. In our paper, we present the history of the “mandarin paradox”, showing the way Balzac reused and recreated this moral question to construct a new literary character: the arriviste. This young man, searching for a place in high society, dares to “kill the mandarin” and to build his career on this murder. Hence, his arrivisme relates to the “mandarin paradox”, notably in the Félicien Champsaur’s novel, L’Arriviste.