Jean Cocteau, a French novelist, stayed with his pupil in the south of France for the latter part of 1927. When staying in
Chablis later that year, he probably finished writing
White Paper, and Desbordes continued writing his
debut novel, ''J'Adore''. The details of the novel's writing process are unclear, and Cocteau never claimed the novel as his own. He initially did not want it to be released, writing on his 1928
manuscript: "Not to be published. It should only be published after my death or anonymously in a deluxe edition limited to five copies". It was published that year, 1928, in his friend's—
Maurice Sachs's—literary press, Editions des Quatre Chemins, for a total printing of 31 copies: 10 for Cocteau, and 21 for the public. In 1930, it was published in a new edition by Éditions du Signe, and received a run of 450 copies; where the first edition had no illustrations, the Éditions du Signe had 17 by Cocteau and
colorist M.B. Armington. By 2007, it was published at least 13 times, including two editions translated into
English, all of which varied considerably: Some (such as in the first edition) had no illustrations at all, and some had 43 (such as in the 1983 Editions de Messine version, all of which were drawn by Cocteau himself and were largely sexually explicit). Frédéric Canovas, a scholar of French literature, wrote that Cocteau chose
The White Paper as the novel's title because of the term's contemporary usage as an official document that addresses social issues. According to Canovas, gay identity and experiences were seen as social problems by Cocteau's contemporaries. == Plot ==