The Mandarins, novel by Simone de Beauvoir, published in French as Les Mandarins in 1954; it won the Prix Goncourt in 1954.
De Beauvoir’s semiautobiographical novel addressed the attempts of post-World War II leftist intellectuals to abandon their elite, “mandarin” status and to engage in political activism. The novel contains philosophical and political arguments, but it is probably more widely read as a roman à clef. The characters of psychologist Anne Dubreuilh and her politically active husband, Robert, were roughly based on de Beauvoir and her lifelong associate Jean-Paul Sartre; de Beauvoir’s account of Anne’s affair with the American Lewis Brogan was a thinly veiled account of her own relationship with novelist Nelson Algren.