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Showing papers on "The Imaginary published in 1972"



Journal ArticleDOI
01 Mar 1972

3 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The works of Raymond Queneau offer many examples of the characteristically ironic reflexivity of much of modem art as discussed by the authors, such as the first sentence of Zazie dans le metro:1 "Doukipudonktan?"
Abstract: The works of Raymond Queneau offer many examples of the characteristically ironic reflexivity of much of modem art. Queneau continually reminds us, by various means, that his creations are specifically aesthetic enterprises. The individual words and phrases may be emphasized by unorthodox but revealing orthography (the obvious example is the famous first sentence of Zazie dans le metro:1 "Doukipudonktan?"), or the verbality of the texts may be accentuated by burlesques of various styles (Queneau's virtuoso Exercises de style [1947] brought him notoriety in the matter of style). In his novels and poems he often gently mocks the literary conventions he himself necessarily employs. Structurally, his works often double back on themselves. Thus, his first novel, Le Chiendent (1933), ends in a reprise of its first sentences, as the characters themselves realize they are characters, "recorded" in a book, and as they accept the closure of their imaginary world which this truth entails. In his most recent novel, Le Vol d'lcare (1968), the Pirandellian reflexivity of the fiction is more extreme: it has to do with the "escape" of a character from the novel which his author is writing and his attempt to maintain an autonomous existence. Queneau's novel ends as the novelist closes the book on "his" adventurous offspring.

1 citations