Caillois, Roger (1913-78). A sociology student in Paris in the 1930s, Caillois briefly participated in Surrealism, and was later a co-founder of the Collège de Sociologie. Caught up by events while visiting South America in 1939, he was exiled there till 1945, becoming a keen publicist for writers like Neruda and Borges. Caillois's early work includes sociological studies such as Le Mythe et l'homme (1938) and L'Homme et le sacré (1939), but his post-war writing became increasingly hard to pigeon-hole. Once he realized his true specialism to be ‘les sciences diagonales’, he flung himself into the pursuit of illuminating analogies across all sorts of subject boundaries. It was in such an interdisciplinary spirit that he founded the review Diogène in 1952. With a neo-Romantic's eye for the telling convergence of natural and cultural signs, Caillois elaborates on such favourite topics as dreams and myths, butterflies and carnivorous flowers, the poetry of
[Roger Cardinal]




