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Malcolm de Chazal

 
French Literature Companion: Malcolm de Chazal

Chazal, Malcolm de (1902-81). Mauritian writer. André Breton declared, with reference to him: ‘On n'avait rien entendu de si fort depuis Lautréamont.’ Chazal's enigmatic, fragmentary texts were originally published as Pensées (seven vols.; vol. 7 is entitled Sens plastique) on Mauritius between 1940 and 1945. Gallimard reissued a selection which was published under the title Sens plastique (1948).

Chazal's work displays the influence of Swedenborg, theosophy, and certain cabalistic practices, and his often violent, aphoristic, anthropomorphic texts establish correspondences and syntheses between the human body and the physical, intimately known environment—animal, vegetable, and mineral—of Mauritius. The essential poetic project involves a quest for an original secret harmony accessible through language.

La Vie filtrée was published in 1949; Petrusmok (1951) and Sens magique (1956) belong to Chazal's ‘mythico-biblical’ period. Poet, visionary, and mystic, his L'Homme et la connaissance and Sens unique (both 1974) provide an important insight into the theory which he developed alongside the production of a large corpus of texts.

[Belinda Jack]

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Quotes By: Malcolm De Chazal
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Quotes:

"The idealist walks on tiptoe, the materialist on his heels."

"The flower in the vase smiles, but no longer laughs."

"We sometimes laugh from ear to ear, but it would be impossible for a smile to be wider than the distance between our eyes."

"Laughter, while it lasts, slackens and unbraces the mind, weakens the faculties and causes a kind of remissness and dissolution in all the powers of the soul; and thus it may be looked on as weakness in the composition of human nature. But if we consider the frequent relieves we receive from it and how often it breaks the gloom which is apt to depress the mind and damp our spirits, with transient, unexpected gleams of joy, one would take care not to grow too wise for so great a pleasure of life."

"Animals awaken, first facially, then bodily. Men's bodies wake before their faces do. The animal sleeps within its body, man sleeps with his body in his mind."

"A women knows how to keep quiet when she is in the right, whereas a man, when he is in the right, will keep on talking."

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Wikipedia: Malcolm de Chazal
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Malcolm de Chazal (12 September 1902- 1 October 1981) was a Mauritian writer, painter, and visionary, known especially for his Sens-Plastique, a work consisting of several thousand aphorisms and pensées. He was born in Vacoas of a French family long established in Mauritius and wrote all his works in French. Except for six years at Louisiana State University, where he received an engineering degree, he spent most of his time in Mauritius where he worked as an agronomist on sugar plantations and later for the Office of Telecommunications.

In 1940 he began to publish in Mauritius a series of volumes consisting of hundreds of numbered thoughts and ideas entitled Pensées. In 1945, a seventh volume of Pensées, bound with another collection of unnumbered aphorisms entitled Sens-Plastique appeared, and two years later a separate Sens-Plastique, Volume II, appeared. It was this latter volume on which the Gallimard edition of 1948 was based that brought Chazal into prominence in France. The following examples may illustrate the novelty and variety of Sens-Plastique.

Half-opened petals give the flower an adenoidal look.
We know the halls of the eye like welcome visitors but we live in our mouth.
Any man who acts singly in the press of a mob will get trampled. Shifting into reverse while making love can kill you.
Immediately before it falls, water turns into a living being as if a person's soul had just slipped into it: look at the way it bends and twists, writhing in desperation. (What if you threw a not quite cold corpse out of an airplane—would the dead awaken?...)

In the prefaces and afterwords of the various editions of Sens-Plastique Chazal explained his method of thinking and writing as follows.

My philosophical position in this work derives from the principle that man and nature are entirely continuous, and that all parts of the human body and all expressions of the human face, including their feelings, can actually be discerned in plants, flowers, and fruits, and to an even greater extent in our other selves, animals. And although minerals are usually considered inanimate, death-like rather than life-like, I would have them also tend towards that supreme synthesis, the human form, especially when they are in motion. "Man was made in the image of God," but beyond that I declare that "Nature was made in the image of man."
But I could never have done this by reasoning. I had to rely on subconscious thinking, the only intuitive resource available to humans--which few of us ever use in an entire lifetime. . . .I should add that I could never have learned to think subconsciously without years of ascetic withdrawal. depriving my body, isolating my self, concentrating my mind and spirit. . .until by stages I had perfected what I consider to be a totally new method of writing.

Chazal’s other writings include notably La Vie Filtrée (1949), a collection of essays that elaborate upon the ideas found in Sens-Plastique, Sens Magique (1957) and Poémes (1968 ), gnomic verses that dramatize the experiences described in Sens-Plastique, and Petrusmok (1951), the spiritual history of Mauritius found in its natural surroundings.

Chazal took up painting in the 1950s at the suggestion of Georges Braques. Unlike the speculative aphoristic character of his best-known writings, his paintings concentrated on natural forms and landscapes in a primitive, emblematic style.

Sens-Plastique has been translated into English by Irving Weiss in a volume published by Green Integer (2005) as Sens-Plastique.

References

  • Malcolm, le tailleur des visions. Documentary film, dir. Khal Torabully.

 
 
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Mauritius and Reunion
Chazal
Mauritian literature

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French Literature Companion. The New Oxford Companion to Literature in French. Copyright © 1995, 2005 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
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