Malcolm de Chazal (12 September, 1902 to 1 October, 1981) was educated in the United States at Louisiana State University. He returned to his island home in 1925 and remained there until his death. Chazal played an important role in French literary history when he sent his self-published
Sens-Plastique II to a number of French writers, artists and intellectuals. This article contains a detailed description of Chazal's exchanges with Jean Paulhan, Georges Duhamel, Francis Ponge, Aim Patri and Jean Dubuffet in the period from 1947 to 1949. It relates the reception of
his work in France and Chazal's subsequent disappointment when this interest was not sustained. The postWorld War II context of French literary life had bearing on his initial positive reception. The particularity of his frames of reference and the inability to assimilate him to literary movements
in the French metropolitan context led to his disfavour. Chazal, undiscouraged, turned to Mauritius for his inspiration and continued to be highly productive for the next four decades. The episode is important for following generations of Mauritian writers because it brought Mauritius and
the specificity of its literary tradition to the attention of the Francophone world. Moreover, Malcolm de Chazal's writings, especially Sens-Plastique, are canonical elements of the twentiethcentury French literature.
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