Abstract
The absence of French criticism on À la recherche du temps perdu1 until the mid-nineteen-fifties has left a gap in the study of literature influenced by Marcel Proust in the period following his death and the publication of Le temps retrouvé in 1927. Studies of Jean-Paul Sartre have focused mainly on his philosophical predecessors. Scholars of both authors have failed to note the similarities between their works, especially in regard to intersubjective relationships. Sartre was famously derisive toward his progenitors. In his “Présentation des Temps modernes” (1945) he referred to Proust as a propagandist of the bourgeois, a “nefarious” psychologist, and a “pederast” guilty of conflating “the secretive ..