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Raymond Roussel

 

Roussel, Raymond (1877-1933). An aura of the unreal and the artificial surrounds the reputation of this most curious of modernists, a French writer who from the outset cherished a self-image of incomparable genius when, at 19, he composed the verse novel La Doublure (1897) in a state of rapture. (The psychiatrist Pierre Janet, whom Roussel later consulted, was to write up his notes as the casehistory of an ecstatic narcissist.) Roussel's world cruise of 1920-1; his meanderings across Europe in a luxury caravan, complete with bathroom and studio; his passion for chess, for expensive clothes, for pistols and barbiturates; his unexplained death in the Palermo hotel where Wagner had written Parsifal—such biographical details support the myth of the artist as dandy, an exquisite solipsist all but refined out of existence.

Apart from the rare performances of such plays as L'Étoile au front (1924) and La Poussière de soleils (1926), which the Paris Surrealists made a point of applauding in the face of general barracking, Roussel's work remained essentially unknown in his lifetime. He was in fact a most fastidious logophile, a man who would spend months making intricate verbal constructs in which an obsessional and highly rigorous method generates startling semantic variations. The posthumous Comment j'ai écrit certains de mes livres (1935) lifts the veil on some of his procedures, such as the punning mechanisms which underlie his early stories and the novel Locus Solus (1914), where elaborate descriptions of abstruse objects at the villa of an eccentric scientist-inventor appear to have been generated solely from the multiple suggestions of homonyms and echo phrases. Whereas the prose novel Impressions d'Afrique (1910) at least opens with a scene of shipwreck on the African coast, the 1, 276 alexandrines of Nouvelles impressions d'Afrique (written between 1915 and 1928, and published in 1932) cultivate an unreal logocentricity that has strictly nothing to do with Africa: the book is essentially an exercise in hermeticism, the momentum of a given sentence being repeatedly forestalled by the insertion of parentheses, themselves in turn subverted by fresh parentheses, until the text at large becomes a maze of elaborate embeddings. Peppered with brilliant but arbitrary similes, and made even more mysterious by the 59 uncaptioned illustrations which Roussel commissioned from a commercial artist who never saw the text, Nouvelles impressions became an exemplary model for later experimentalists such as Leiris and Robbe-Grillet.

[Roger Cardinal]

Bibliography

  • J. Ferry, Une étude sur Raymond Roussel (1953)
  • M. Foucault, Raymond Roussel (1963)
  • R. Heppenstall, Raymond Roussel: A Critical Guide (1966)
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Columbia Encyclopedia:

Raymond Roussel

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Roussel, Raymond, 1877-1933, French writer. Roussel was an eccentric whose beautifully written work employed hallucinatory imagery while eschewing emotion and the expression of personality. At first generally unappreciated, Roussel's writing-most notably, Impressions d'Afrique (1910) and How I Write Certain of My Books (1935, tr. 1971)-is now recognized as anticipating both surrealism and the nouveau roman [new novel] (see French literature).

Bibliography

See biography by M. Ford, Raymond Roussel and the Republic of Dreams (2001); study by M. Foucault (1963, tr. 1987).

Wikipedia on Answers.com:

Raymond Roussel

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Raymond Roussel (Paris, January 20, 1877 - Palermo, July 14, 1933) was a French poet, novelist, playwright, musician, and chess enthusiast. Through his novels, poems, and plays he exerted a profound influence on certain groups within 20th century French literature, including the Surrealists, Oulipo, and the authors of the nouveau roman.

Contents

Biography

Roussel was the third and last child in his family, with a brother Georges and sister Germaine. In 1893, at age 15, he was admitted to the Paris Conservatoire for piano. A year later, he inherited a substantial fortune from his deceased father and began to write poetry to accompany his musical compositions. At age 17, he wrote Mon Âme, a long poem published three years later in Le Gaulois. By 1896, he had commenced editing his long poem La Doublure when he suffered a mental crisis. After the poem was published on June 10, 1897 and was completely unsuccessful, Roussel began to see the psychiatrist Pierre Janet. In subsequent years, his inherited fortune allowed him to publish his own works and mount luxurious productions of his plays. He wrote and published some of his most important work between 1900 and 1914, and then from 1920 to 1921 traveled around the world. He continued to write for the next decade, but when his fortune finally gave out, he made his way to a hotel in Palermo, where he died of a barbiturate overdose in 1933. He is buried in Père-Lachaise cemetery in Paris.

Roussel's most famous works are Impressions of Africa and Locus Solus, both written according to formal constraints based on homonymic puns. Roussel kept this compositional method a secret until the publication of his posthumous text, How I Wrote Certain of My Books, where he describes it as follows: "I chose two similar words. For example billiards and pilliards (looter). Then I added to it words similar but taken in two different directions, and I obtained two almost identical sentences thus. The two sentences found, it was a question of writing a tale which can start with the first and finish by the second. Amplifying the process then, I sought new words reporting itself to the word billiards, always to take them in a different direction than that which was presented first of all, and that provided me each time a creation moreover. The process evolved/moved and I was led to take an unspecified sentence, of which I drew from the images by dislocating it, a little as if it had been a question of extracting some from the drawings of rebus." For example, Les lettres du blanc sur les bandes du vieux billard/The white letters on the cushions of the old billiard table… must somehow reach the phrase, …les lettres du blanc sur les bandes du vieux pillard/letters [written by] a white man about the hordes of the old plunderer.

John Ashbery summarizes Locus Solus thus in his introduction to Michel Foucault's Death and the Labyrinth: "A prominent scientist and inventor, Martial Canterel, has invited a group of colleagues to visit the park of his country estate, Locus Solus. As the group tours the estate, Canterel shows them inventions of ever-increasing complexity and strangeness. Again, exposition is invariably followed by explanation, the cold hysteria of the former giving way to the innumerable ramifications of the latter. After an aerial pile driver which is constructing a mosaic of teeth and a huge glass diamond filled with water in which float a dancing girl, a hairless cat, and the preserved head of Danton, we come to the central and longest passage: a description of eight curious tableaux vivants taking place inside an enormous glass cage. We learn that the actors are actually dead people whom Canterel has revived with 'resurrectine,' a fluid of his invention which if injected into a fresh corpse causes it continually to act out the most important incident of its life."

New Impressions of Africa is a 1,274-line poem, consisting of four long cantos in rhymed alexandrines, each a single sentence with parenthetical asides that run up to five levels deep. From time to time, a footnote refers to a further poem containing its own depths of brackets.

Criticism and legacy

Perhaps not surprisingly, Roussel was unpopular during his lifetime and critical reception of his works was almost unanimously negative. Nevertheless, he was admired by the Surrealist group and other avant-garde writers, particularly Michel Leiris and Marcel Duchamp. He began to be rediscovered in the late 1950s, by the Oulipo and Alain Robbe-Grillet. His most direct influence in the English speaking world was on the New York School of poets; John Ashbery, Harry Mathews, James Schuyler, and Kenneth Koch briefly edited a magazine called Locus Solus after his novel. French theorist Michel Foucault's only book-length work of literary criticism is on Roussel.

Selected works

  • 1897 Mon âme, a poem - published on 12 July 1897 in Le Gaulois (revision of 1894 work)
  • 1897 La Doublure, a novel in verse
  • 1900 La Seine, a novel in verse
  • 1900 Chiquenaude, a novel
  • 1904 La vue, Le concert and La source, poems
  • 1910 Impressions d’Afrique (Impressions of Africa), a novel, later turned into a play
  • 1914 Locus Solus, a novel
  • 1925 L'étoile au front, a play
  • 1926 La Poussière de soleil, a play
  • 1932 Nouvelles Impressions d’Afrique (New Impressions of Africa), a poem of four cantos with 59 drawings
  • 1935 Comment j'ai écrit certains de mes livres (How I Wrote Certain of my Books, 1995, ISBN 1-878972-14-6), translated by Trevor Winkfield, contains a cross-section of his major writings, including Roussel's essay on how he composed his books, the first chapter of each of Impressions d’Afrique and Locus Solus, the fifth act of a play, the third canto of New Impressions of Africa and all 59 of its drawings, and the outline for a novel Roussel apparently never wrote.
  • 1935 Parmi les noirs (Among the Blacks), a story first published in Comment j'ai écrit certains de mes livres, has been republished (Among the Blacks: Two Works (1988, ISBN 0-939691-02-7) with an essay by Ron Padgett.

References

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Oxford Companion to French Literature. The New Oxford Companion to Literature in French. Copyright © 1995, 2005 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2012, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/ Read more
Wikipedia on Answers.com. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article Raymond Roussel Read more

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