Abstract
Composed at the end of the German Occupation of France during World War II, Simone de Beauvoir’s first and only play, The Useless Mouths (Les bouches inutiles), empathetically imagines the emotional turmoil of besieged noncombatants in the Middle Ages, who were frequently labeled “useless mouths” and forced to undergo atrocious suffering. Both a stunning instance of “feeling for the premodern” and an allegory for the political circumstances in which Beauvoir wrote, the play anticipates the antideterministic historiography that Beauvoir would later employ in The Second Sex. This article examines the emotional dynamics of The Useless Mouths, arguing that the play stages a theory of emotional ethics that is simultaneously existentialist and attentive to the vicissitudes of identity politics. Although some of the play’s initial critics, and Beauvoir herself, repudiated The Useless Mouths as excessively didactic, its central lesson — that the vital and endless task of producing and maintaining a truly egalitarian society is necessarily rife with anguish, shame, fear, and love — remains as crucial today as it was in either Beauvoir’s time or the Middle Ages.
Notes
1. As of yet, Beauvoir’s medievalism has not received much scholarly attention. Exceptions include Holsinger Citation2005 (8, 32, 59, 73, 77) and Hollywood Citation2002 (120–45).
2. Beauvoir portrays the situation of Sismondi’s “useless mouths” in All Men are Mortal (Citation1992, 76).
3. Recalling this period in 1980, Beauvoir suggests that she selected the medieval content of this programming specifically for its innocuous, apolitical character in order to avoid complicity with the collaborationist tendencies of the radio program at which she worked (Bair Citation1990, 280).
4. All citations of Les bouches inutiles are from the 1945 edition; all translations are from Stanley and Naji (Beauvoir Citation2011a).
5. See also (Jones and Reinelt (Citation1983), 530–33).
6. On anxiety, see Kierkegaard Citation1981; 41–5; Heidegger Citation1962, 391–96; and Sartre Citation1993, 65–84.
7. On love as conflict, see Sartre Citation1993, 491–533.
8. I have replaced Parshley’s use of the phrase “Genuine love” with “Authentic love” here to better represent Beauvoir’s original “L’amour authentique” (Beauvoir Citation1949, 505).