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Paths to Contemporary French Literature, Vol. 1 [Hardcover]

John Taylor (Author)
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Book Description

0765802163 978-0765802163 December 1, 2003
** Named a Best Book of 2007 by Ready Steady Book, an independent book review website, working in association with The Book Depository, which is devoted to reviewing the best books in literary fiction, poetry, history and philosophy.

"An invaluable guide to new literary territory, Taylor is equally good in discussing writers whom the reader already knows."
-- Raphael Rubenstein, Rain Taxi

"The paths that John Taylor invites us to walk in this book are inviting ones: fifty-five luminous essays devoted to the broad avenues and the seductive byways of contemporary writing in France. John Taylor is opinionated but his opinions are rigorously argued ones. He strikes a canny and productive balance among a variety of competing concerns: the will to instruct his readers, the desire to share with them some very real pleasures, the imperative to interpret critically, and so forth. What emerges here is the image of a rare reader, one who is always willing to engage literature on its own terms, and that of a literature that is mobile, ambitious, provocative and deeply invested in the process of becoming. -- Warren Motte, Review of Contemporary Fiction

"In this great introduction to some 50 French writers and poets little known outside of France, Taylor (The Presence of Things Past; The World As It Is), winner of the Three Oaks Prie for Fiction, invites his readers on an interesting journey."--Library Journal

"Here it is under one cover: a deeply informed, delightful, and provocative stroll' through the literature of postwar France. From the chroniques of Cingria to the mythologies of Barthes, John Taylor introduces us to the prose and poetry of doens of French authors, many of them regrettably never translated into English. Taylor is a skillful and witty guide, able to locate a writer between the traditions of Catullus and Pavese or to identify a style borrowing equally from Hlderlin and Hemingway. Working across every genre from autobiography to poetry to fiction to travelogue to the essay, these French authors, well known and obscure, have plumbed the quintessential French problem' of subjectivity. Tired of the culture wars? The language-lyric debate? The post-game analysis of post-structuralism? I suggest you dive into any one of John Taylor's Paths' for a reminder of the astonishing breadth and depth and complexity of which literature is capable."--Erica Funkhouser, author, Pursuit

"Here we have vast erudition revealed in graceful, arresting sentences, writing that provides confidence and pleasure. John Taylor's writing strongly evokes Henry James' writing about French literature in his own day. Like James, Taylor is both generous and astute, never relinquishing admiration for the intricate process of analysis, analysis that he does so penetratingly and eloquently. However brilliant Taylor's observations, behind them rests a deep esteem for the writer, for his or her work, and for the tradition from which it comes. This is critical writing that is satisfying at every single level."--Richard Goodman, author, French Dirt: The Story of a Garden in the South of France

"As they stroll through forgotten quartiers of Paris, wander in memory through the fields of a Norman childhood, reflect on a poem's resemblance to the salt marshes of the Breton coast, mourn the death of a beloved young wife, or look for answers in questions to which the only answers are more questions--France's most celebrated and, in some cases, still uncelebrated contemporary writers are exquisitely captured by John Taylor in a prose both limpid and lapidary and through a host of finely wrought essays, each a small jewel of critical insight, poetic sensitivity, and meticulous interpretation. Like a message in a bottle cast up on the shore, this work offers the English-speaking reader an original and poetic way to understand, appreciate, and love French contemporary culture."--Richard Stamelman, professor of romance languages and comparative literature, Williams College

Although the great French novelists of the last two centuries are widely read in America, there is a widespread notion that little of importance has happened in French literature since the heyday of Sartre, Camus, and the nouveau roman. Some might argue that even well-read Americans are ignorant about what is happening in European literature generally. Certainly, there has never been so few translations of foreign books in the United States, or so little coverage of foreign writers. Curious American readers need new, up-to-date information and analyses about what is happening elsewhere. Paths to Contemporary French Literature is a stimulating and much-needed guide to the major currents of one of the world's great literatures.

This critical panorama of contemporary French literature introduces English-language readers to over fifty important writers and poets, many of whom are still little known outside of France. Emphasiing authors who are admired by their peers (as opposed to those with overnight reputations), John Taylor offers a compelling insider's view. The pioneering essays included in this book offer incisive analyses of the ideas motivating current writing and delve into a writer's or poet's entire output. Although some names may be familiar (Marguerite Duras, Hlne Cixous, Philippe Jaccottet, Henri Michaux), the reader obtains fresh reappraisals of their seminal work. Especially noteworthy, however, are Taylor's lively introductions to many other key writers who either have not yet crossed the English Channel, let alone the Atlantic. Combating the notion that French literature is overtly intellectual, inaccessible, or interested only in formal experimentation, Taylor shows that many French writers are instead acutely inquisitive about the outside world, shrewd observers of reality, even very funny. Although not conceived as a "reference book," the volume possesses some qualities of a reference work: a good bibliography, reliable dates and biographical facts.

Paths to Contemporary French Literature will be of interest to students of French literature and culture, literary scholars, and readers of contemporary fiction and poetry.

"John Taylor is opinionated, but his opinions are rigorously argued ones. He strikes a canny and productive balance among a variety of competing concerns: the will to instruct his readers, the desire to share with them some very real pleasures, the imperative to interpret critically, and so forth. What emerges [in Paths to Contemporary French Literature] is the image of a rare reader, one who is always willing to engage literature on its own terms, and that of a literature that is mobile, ambitious, provocative, and deeply invested in the process of becoming." -Warren Motte, Review of Contemporary Fiction

John Taylor is the author of four collections of short prose: The Presence of Things Past (1992), The World As It Is (1998), Mysteries of the Body and the Mind (1998), and Some Sort of Joy (2000).

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Editorial Reviews

Review

"An invaluable guide to new literary territory (. . .). In the early part of the 20th century, Valery Larbaud was instrumental as a critic and translator in making the bounty of English-language modernism available to French readers and writers. Today, Taylor is performing a similarly important export-import function in the other direction." --Raphael Rubinstein, Rain Taxi, Vol. 9, No. 2, Summer 2004

" (. . .) fifty-five luminous essays devoted to the broad avenues and the seductive byways of contemporary writing in France. (. . .) [Taylor] strikes a canny and productive balance among a variety of competing concerns: the will to instruct his readers, the desire to share with them some very real pleasures, the imperative to interpret critically (. . .). What emerges here is the image of a rare reader, one who is always willing to engage literature on its own terms." --Warren Motte, The Review of Contemporary Fiction, Summer 2004

"(. . .) seminal, groundbreaking essays (. . .) offering insightful analysis of the literary ideas and innovations of current and influential French writers. Paths to Contemporary French Literature is especially commended for addition to college and university-level French Cultural Studies, Intellectual History, and World Literature Studies collections and supplemental curriculum reading lists." --Midwest Book Review, Spring 2004

"[Taylor] challenges a major criticism of contemporary French literature as solipsistic. Is autobiographique really the same thing as our autobiographical'? he asks in his introduction, then suggests that French writing is autobiographical in distinct and provocative ways and that it has approached autobiography from an extraordinary variety of viewpoints.' (. . .) He states Gracq's importance persuasively and offers concise, insightful introductions to the novels of Simon and the poetry of Guillevic, Jaccottet, or Bonnefoy. In a final essay on reading contemporary French poetry, Taylor grapples with the genre's strangeness" from an Anglocentric point of view, e.g., language as ontologically problematic, Cartesian questions of self, the poet's relationship to things, and the prose poems as peculiarly French. (. . .) Taylor's meticulous essays (. . .) provide erudite and incisive introductions to a certain kind of French writer and dispel the notion that contemporary French literature is pointlessly narcissistic." --Gervais E. Reed, The French Review, Vol. 79, No. 1, October 2005

"The great temptation in reading John Taylor's Paths to Contemporary French Literature is that with every chapter, one wants to set aside the book and go seek out the work of the writers he so richly explores; like this, it might take a lifetime to finish, but without regrets. Indeed, he has spent a substantial part of the past twenty years writing this book in the form of essays, profiles, and book reviews, for such publications as the Times Literary Supplement and France Magaine, where his quarterly column has opened a window each time onto the world of another singular writer. (. . .) The great majority of these authors are little-known in English, if at all, [and he] offers us a set of optics though which we may begin to view [them]." --Jason Weiss, Chelsea, No. 78, 2005.

"Despair not: attentive literary critics still exist. The ignorance with which American and English readers view contemporary French literature has now been vanquished by John Taylor's opus magnum, Paths to Contemporary French Literature. (. . .) This book now stands forth as the perfect place to discover what French literature is really all about." --Marc Blanchet, Le Matricule des Anges, May 2004 (in French).

"Roland Barthes's plaisir du texte' is at work in these pages. For John Taylor, every book is a discovery, every author contains a universe. (. . .) Superbly well-read, Taylor fills his book with a comparatist's echoes, which is perhaps the modern form of what was formerly called humanism." --Claude Michel Cluny, Le Figaro Littraire, 29 July 2004 (in French)

"An extraordinary gift for anyone wanting to immerse him or herself in French culture, but doesn't know where to start, John Taylor's Paths to Contemporary French Literature is an elegant and insightful book of essays featuring over fifty writers and their works. (. . .) It's intelligent, absolutely, but refreshingly accessible." --Alexandra Carew, The Connexion, December 2004

"(. . .) a broad range of authors and genres--from poetry, travel writing, and novels to essays--(. . .) allowing the reader to make unexpected rapprochements at times between writers not readily associated with each other. (. . .) What is remarkable is that he has found a voice and a point of view nicely situated both inside and outside the culture--no easy feat for a non-native French speaker reading French literature. His take on many better-known writers--Guillevic, Michaux, Modiano, Perec, Sarraute, and Simon--is remarkably juste, inspiring one to re-read if not discover some of the writers and works he examines." --Mark D. Lee, Symposium, vol. 58, No. 4, Winter 2005

"I would like to use this opportunity to draw attention to an essential reference work, John Taylor's two splendid volumes, Paths to Contemporary French Literature volumes 1 and 2....In these well written, consistently instructive and often illuminating pages, Taylor discusses well over a hundred French writers, including many of my favourites: Sarraute, Des Forets, Duras, Antelme, Perec, Jabs, Marcel Cohen, Roland Barthes, Bonnefoy, Ponge, Deguy, Quignard, Paulhan, Rawic, Beckett, Emmanuel Bove. The long essays on Pascal Quignard and Michel Deguy are particularly insightful, and essential reading for the sympathetic newcomer seeking an introduction to these major writers." --Anthony Rudolf, ReadySteadyBook.com

"As a literary critic, John Taylor is considered to be one of the most important and knowledgeable 'explainers' of contemporary French literature to foreign readers." (Translated) --Maison des ?crivains et de la Littrature "In these well written, consistently instructive and often illuminating pages, Taylor discusses well over a hundred French writers, including many of my favorites: Sarraute, Des Forets, Duras, Antelme, Perec, Jabs, Marcel Cohen, Roland Barthes, Bonnefoy, Ponge, Deguy, Quignard, Paulhan, Rawic, Beckett, Emmanuel Bove. The long essays on Pascal Quignard and Michel Deguy are particularly insightful, and essential reading for the sympathetic newcomer seeking an introduction to these major writers." --Anthony Rudolf



“While Mr. Taylors’s work will be used as a research tool, a reference source and a classroom text, it can be equally well approached as a vast, non-fiction novel… Between the two volumes, over 100 authors are introduced …The subjects’ lives, souls and places in French literature are fully revealed…The degree of reading and analysis that goes into any one of these studies could comprise a decade’s labor for an ordinary scholar, but Mr. Taylor takes it in stride.”

–-Martin Abramson, Book/Mark

About the Author

John Taylor is the author of Paths to Contemporary French Literature (Volumes 1-3) and Into the Heart of European Poetry. He has written numerous books of stories, short prose, and poetry, including The Apocalypse Tapestries. He writes the “Poetry Today” column in the Antioch Review and has long been a regular contributor to the Times Literary Supplement. He has lived in France since 1977. In 2010, he received a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts for his project to translate Georges Perros’s Papiers collés.


Product Details

  • Hardcover: 358 pages
  • Publisher: Transaction Publishers (December 1, 2003)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0765802163
  • ISBN-13: 978-0765802163
  • Product Dimensions: 9.3 x 6.4 x 1.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.5 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,475,138 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Originally from Des Moines, where he was born in 1952, John Taylor has lived in Europe since 1975--first in Germany, then in Greece, and in France beginning in 1977. His collections of stories and short prose ("The Presence of Things Past", "Mysteries of the Body and the Mind", "The World as It Is", "Some Sort of Joy") draw on the author's childhood and adult experiences in Iowa, Idaho, and Europe. The late French film director, Louis Malle, summed up Taylor's "Presence of Things Past" as "charming evocations of a Midwestern childhood". As for "Some Sort of Joy", this "odd travelogue and oblique self-investigation" (as the critic Jeremy Alden puts it) offers unusual insider's insights into the daily life of an "average" medium-sized French town. "The Apocalypse Tapestries" combines prose and poetry, and is inspired by the famous tapestries in the Chateau of Angers as well as by the Book of Revelation. Taylor's writing has been translated into French, modern Greek, Italian, German, Dutch, Polish, Slovene, and Ukrainian. As a critic, he is widely known for his essays about French poets and writers. His three-volume "Paths to Contemporary French Literature" indeed introduces over a hundred and fifty French authors to English readers, often for the first time. He also writes more generally on European literature: these essays have been gathered in "Into the Heart of European Poetry". Ever since the mid-1980s, Taylor has been a regular contributor to the Times Literary Supplement. He writes the "Poetry Today" column in the Antioch Review, and contributes articles to the Yale Review, the Michigan Quarterly Review, Context, and many other periodicals. He has also translated the work of several Greek and French writers, including Elias Papadimitrakopoulos ("Toothpaste with Chlorophyll / Maritime Hot Baths"), Elias Petropoulos, Veroniki Dalakoura, Laurence Werner David, José-Flore Tappy, Georges Perros, Pierre-Albert Jourdan ("The Straw Sandals"), Jacques Dupin ("Of Flies and Monkeys"), and Philippe Jaccottet ("And, Nonetheless"). He has been awarded grants from the National Endowment for the Arts and from the Sonia Raiziss Charitable Foundation for his translations. Taylor now lives near Angers, in the Lower Loire Valley.

 

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Showcases more than fifty contemporary French writers, May 3, 2004
This review is from: Paths to Contemporary French Literature, Vol. 1 (Hardcover)
In Paths To Contemporary French Literature, John Taylor introduces and showcases more than fifty contemporary French writers, novelists, and poets to an American readership. Often unknown on this side of the Atlantic, these are men and women who have shaped French literature since the days of Sarte, Camus, and the "nouveau roman". The seminal, groundbreaking essays comprising Paths To Contemporary French Literature offer insightful analysis of the literary ideas and innovations of current and influential French writers. Paths To Contemporary French Literature is especially commended for addition to college and university level French Cultural Studies, Intellectual History, and World Literature Studies collection and supplemental curriculum reading lists.
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