
Produced by Juhani Kärkkäinen and Tapio Riikonen
ROMAIN ROLLAND
A charged conversation opens the novel, pitting a stubborn, outspoken young man against a stern, paternal voice that warns of the dangers of labeling and hatred. In a single, breathless exchange, the protagonist declares his belief that truth must be spoken, even when it condemns the very nations that claim to protect him. The dialogue spirals through accusations of anti‑German, anti‑French, and anti‑Jewish bias, exposing how closely personal conscience can become tangled with the politics of a continent still reeling from war.
Through this claustrophobic debate, the story explores the burden of the artist who feels both an outsider and a reluctant guardian of cultural identity. Themes of alienation, moral responsibility, and the clash between national pride and universal humanity pulse beneath the terse, lyrical language. Listeners are drawn into a tense, intellectual battlefield where each argument reverberates with the urgency of a world on the brink of radical change.
Full title
Jean-Christophe Pariisissa I V. Markkinatori V. Markkinatori
Language
fi
Duration
~7 hours (423K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2019-02-24
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1866–1944
A Nobel Prize–winning French writer, he used fiction, biography, and essays to explore music, conscience, and the struggle to stay humane in troubled times. Best known for the vast novel cycle Jean-Christophe, he also became one of Europe’s most recognizable literary voices for peace.
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