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Présentation H de Philippe Sollers Format Broché
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Résumé :
Philippe Sollers' groundbreaking 1973 novel, H, was inspired by the May 1968 Paris student/worker uprising, and, in its own right, performs a revolt against much that's been (and still is) taken for granted in the belles lettres.
Described as a music that is inscribed in language, becoming the object of its own reasoning (Julia Kristeva) and as an unpunctuated wall of words, an extremely active [...] mass of language (David Hayman), H does away with plot, character and setting-and, on the typographical level, with punctuation, capitalisation, or paragraph breaks-in order to attempt what Sollers himself called an external polylogue.
The text performs an infinite fragmentation of subjectivity into a plethora of ventriloquized voices where words turn round and come back, producing a material fullness of pleasures and everything is organized into a splendid series of irrelevancies (Roland Barthes). It is this fulness of H, this suffocation it produces, that might be, with Barthes, termed its beauty.
Accommodating a vast range of tonalities, attitudes, modes, and ideologies, H makes a case in point of how a literary work should function according to Sollers: A work exists by itself only potentially, and its actualization (or production) depends on its readings and on the moments at which these readings actively take place.
H (translated by Veronika Stankovianska & David Vichnar) will become the first English-language translation of this influential experimental text.
Biographie:
Philippe Sollers is, quite simply, one of the most important post-war French writers, critics and public figures. The avant-garde journal Tel Quel, which he cofounded in 1960 with the writer and art critic Marcelin Pleynet, gave a voice to a whole generation of French theorists, philosophers, writers, & activists. Sollers was also at the forefront of the May 1968 student revolutions in Paris--an experience behind his external polylogue, the textual stream entitled H (1973), whose English translation was published with Equus Press in late 2014. Sollers' most famous works include Nombres (1966), Lois (1972), Paradis (1981), or Femmes (1983).
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