• No results found

La Poétique de Houellebecq : réalisme, satire, mythe

N/A
N/A
Protected

Academic year: 2021

Share "La Poétique de Houellebecq : réalisme, satire, mythe"

Copied!
2
0
0

Loading.... (view fulltext now)

Full text

(1)

La Poétique de Houellebecq : réalisme, satire, mythe

_____________________________________________

Jacob Carlson

Akademisk avhandling för avläggande av filosofie doktorsexamen i romanska språk: franska vid Göteborgs universitet, som med vederbörligt tillstånd av Humanistiska fakultetsnämnden

kommer att offentligen försvaras lördagen 14 maj 2011, kl. 10.00 i Lilla hörsalen, Renströmsgatan 6, Göteborg.

Handledare: Christina Heldner, professor emerita i franska vid Göteborgs universitet.

Bihandledare: Eva Ahlstedt, professor i franska vid Göteborgs universitet Opponent: Anne Cousseau, lektor i fransk litteratur vid Universitetet i Nancy 2.

Betygsnämnd: Gro Bjørnerud Mo, professor i fransk litteratur vid Universitetet i Oslo, Ken Benson, professor i spanska vid Göteborgs universitet och Katharina Vajta, lektor i franska vid Göteborgs universitet.

Thèse pour l’obtention du titre de docteur ès lettres présentée à la Faculté des Lettres et des Sciences humaines de l’Université de Göteborg et à soutenir publiquement avec la permission

du Conseil de faculté, le samedi 14 mai 2011 à 10 heures, dans le Petit amphithéâtre de la Faculté des Lettres et des Sciences humaines, Renströmsgatan 6, Göteborg, Suède.

Directeur de thèse : Christina Heldner, professeur émérite de Français à l’Université de Göteborg.

Co-directeur : Eva Ahlstedt, professeur titulaire de Littérature française à l’Université de Göteborg Rapporteur de soutenance : Anne Cousseau, maître de conférences en Littérature fr. à l’Université Nancy 2.

Jury : Gro Bjørnerud Mo, professeur de Littérature française à l’Université d’Oslo, Ken Benson, professeur titulaire de la Chaire d’Espagnol de l’Université de Göteborg et Katharina Vajta, maître de conférences en

Français à l’Université de Göteborg.

UNIVERSITÉ DE GÖTEBORG

DÉP. DES LANGUES ET LITTÉRATURES

(2)

Abstract

Title: La Poétique de Houellebecq: réalisme, satire, mythe Language: French, 250 pages

English Title: Houellebecq’s Poetics: Realism, Satire, Myth Author: Jacob Carlson

University/Department/Year: University of Gothenburg (Sweden) / Department of Languages and Literatures, Box 200, SE 405 30, Göteborg

ISBN: 978-91-978545-1-1

Ph.D. dissertation at University of Gothenburg, Sweden, 14 May 2011

This thesis sets out to explore French writer Michel Houellebecq’s poetics of the novel. It is advanced in the introduction that Houellebecq’s work could be read against the novelist’s 1997 suggestion that “if somebody today was able to craft a mode of expression that was at once honest and positive, they would change the world”. A poem where Houellebecq expresses a need for “unseen metaphors” (“métaphores inédites”) is also put forward as an example of the author’s aspirations within this area.

In order to provide a background to Houellebecq’s quest for an honest literary discourse, the thesis first presents the writer’s world view, exploring Houellebecqian ideas about sexuality, metaphysics, aesthetics, religion and the arts – in particular in relation to Arthur Schopenhauer, Friedrich Nietzsche, Auguste Comte and French poetry theorist Jean Cohen.

This account takes place in chapter 2 and the material here consists of Houellebecq’s whole work, i.e. his poetry and his essays as well as his novels. One important point made in this chapter is the difference, as stated by Houellebecq himself, between literary and religious discourse.

The core of the thesis, however, is chapter 3 and 4, where Houellebecq’s first four novels Extension du domaine de la lutte, Les Particules élémentaires, Plateforme and La Possibilité d’une île serve as material for the analysis.

Chapter 3 attempts to capture Houellebecq’s poetics in relation to literary genre by comparing his novels to the French 19th century realist novel, Menippean satire and Novalis’

unfinished novel Henry of Ofterdingen.

Finally, chapter 4 presents an analysis of what is defined as the poetic “dense”

structuration of Houellebecq’s novels. Each of the four novels is studied with particular focus on the metaphorical interpretation of their titles as well as on the motifs of sun and light. In this context, Riffaterre’s concept of the “poetic matrix” is loosely used to characterise Houellebecq’s novels as romans poèmes (“novel-poems”). The chapter ends with an analysis of some of the mythical elements found in Houellebecq’s novels, in particular Plato’s Myth of the Androgyne and its relation to the Houellebecqian yearning for love and purpose in life.

Both chapter 3 and chapter 4 can be seen as an investigation into the manner in which Houellebecq’s pursuit of “honesty” relies on traditional elements of Western literature such as the three literary genres studied in chapter 3 and the literary imaginary of motifs and myths put forward in chapter 4.

Keywords: Michel Houellebecq, poetics, metaphysics, Arthur Schopenhauer, Auguste Comte, positivism, Jean Cohen, aesthetic categories, lyricism, literary genre, Erich Auerbach, literary realism, Mikhail Bakhtin, satire, Menippean satire, cynicism, Novalis, Michael Riffaterre, motif of light vs. darkness, motif of the sun, myth, literary myth, myth of androgyny, symbol, romanticism.

References

Related documents

Dans le chapitre consacré à Camus, nous ferons une présentation du roman et du personnage principal, pour ensuite faire une brève comparaison entre les personnages Martin et

Le but de la présente étude est de présenter l’esquisse d’une poétique 6 houellebecquienne. Il importe cependant de bien situer ce qui nous permet de parler d’une telle

1 The words and letters printed in italics in the Slavonic column have been written by a hand other than the regular scribe, which means, in the case of Slav 42, by Hand c, and in

Next, the influence of emotion (valence), the intensity of the emotion, and the control variables discussed on viral behaviour (“forward” or “like” online videos) are

Another opinion on Thomas More's intention with his text is the one of Claeys, who after describing the dialogue in Book I and the presentation of the Utopian state in Book II of

After studying the 1928 Orchestre et Chœurs de l’opéra-Comique version under Élie Cohen and discovering how much vibrato the flautist plays with in that particular

élémentaires trots allt bör läsas som ett ställningstagande för den genmanipulationsutopi som presenteras. Man skulle kunna säga att redaktörerna för

Dans cette anthologie, nous trouvons également un article écrit par Christina Sjöblad intitulé « Ernst Bendz’ litteraturkritik », (p. 130-137) dans lequel elle décrit