“YOU SEE THE WHITE MAN AS THE BLACK MAN SEES HIM”: FINE LIMITED EDITIONS CLUB PRODUCTION OF MARAN’S BATOUALA, ELEGANTLY ILLUSTRATED BY COVARRUBIAS
MARAN, René. Batouala… Translated by Alvah C. Bessie and Illustrated by Miguel Covarrubias. New York: Limited Editions Club (Walpole Press), 1932. Slim folio (9 by 13-1/2 inches), original full tan morocco, uncut, original paper-covered slipcase.
Limited edition, number 75 of 1,500 copies signed by the artist, of this “objective” novel of life in French Equatorial Africa, “a kingdom built on corpses,” with six full-page color lithographs and numerous elegant in-text line cuts by Miguel Covarrubias.
First published in 1921, this controversial best-selling novel treats colonialism and the relationship between the races in French Equatorial Africa. “You smell the smells of the village, you eat its food, you see the white man as the black man sees him… That is all there is to the story, but when you have read it, you have seen Batouala, and that means that it is a great novel” (Ernest Hemingway). Its young author René Maran presented “a persecuted negro race” at the hands of “a handful of unscrupulous Commandants and administrators.” A rebuttal came from colonial doctor René Trautmann, who accused Maran of “unwonted generalization, which the ignorant reader, prejudiced by lack of information, is likely to misconstrue.” The illustrator of this fine edition of Batouala, Mexican painter and caricaturist Miguel Covarrubias, drew upon his keen interests in archaeology, anthropology and ethnology. In much of his work, he has captured the spirit of the Harlem Renaissance, especially in his book Negro Drawings (1927). A man of many talents, Covarrubias also designed sets and costumes for the theater, including “La Revue Negre,” starring Josephine Baker— the show that made her a smash in Paris. LEC 35.
Book fine, slipcase with expert restoration. A very desirable edition of this landmark novel of African race relations.