Geocritism of Space in, La Modification, Novel of Michel Butor

2016 ◽  
Vol 7 (3) ◽  
pp. 154-158
Author(s):  
Somayeh Rostami Pour ◽  
Fatemeh Khan Mohammadi
Keyword(s):  
2013 ◽  
pp. 133-141
Author(s):  
Sophie Guermès

The compartment in A Change of Heart is a secular space. However, the Sacred will gradually invade it through hallucinations of the narrator. Thus an unexpected and fantastic struggle led by the Pope, priests, cardinals, prophets and sibyls against Leon Delmont will cause a change of his initial decision, motivating and justifying the novel’s title.


1971 ◽  
Vol 55 (5) ◽  
pp. 328
Author(s):  
Adeline Abel ◽  
Jacques Guicharnaud
Keyword(s):  

2010 ◽  
Vol 29 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cecilia Zokner
Keyword(s):  

Michael Butor, um dos representantes do novo romancefrancês recebu, em 1957, o prêmio Renaudot pelo aeu romance La Modification. Trabalhador incansável, sua obraengloba, hoje, uma série de títulos (Passage de Milan, 1954.L'emploi du temps, 1956. Le génie du lieu, 1958), aos quai¿se acrescentaram neste ano Vanite e Envoi.Vanite foi baseado no diálogo de Butor com dois amigos. Um deles, Michel Launay, autor de uma tese que é uma excelente ' contribuição ao estudo de Rousseau, esteve no Brasil durante três anos como professor da USP.O testemunho foi recolhido por Cecilia Zokner em maio deste ano, em Nice onde ambos residem. 0 de Michel Butor no dia 4 de maio, na sua casa, Antipodes, às 11 horas da manhã de um domingo chuvoso, logo após o passeio com seu cão. No dia 5, num pequeno restaurante perto da Faculdade, em meio a conversas de estudantes sobre a greve que j á durava três meses, Michel Launay falou sobre a sua participação naobra.


2012 ◽  
pp. 66-80
Author(s):  
Michał Mrozowicki

Michel Butor, born in 1926, one of the leaders of the French New Novel movement, has written only four novels between 1954 and 1960. The most famous of them is La Modification (Second thoughts), published in 1957. The author of the paper analyzes two other Butor’s novels: L’Emploi du temps (Passing time) – 1956, and Degrés (Degrees) – 1960. The theme of absence is crucial in both of them. In the former, the novel, presented as the diary of Jacques Revel, a young Frenchman spending a year in Bleston (a fictitious English city vaguely similar to Manchester), describes the narrator’s struggle to survive in a double – spatial and temporal – labyrinth. The first of them, formed by Bleston’s streets, squares and parks, is symbolized by the City plan. During his one year sojourn in the city, using its plan, Revel learns patiently how to move in its different districts, and in its strange labyrinth – strange because devoid any centre – that at the end stops annoying him. The other, the temporal one, symbolized by the diary itself, the labyrinth of the human memory, discovered by the narrator rather lately, somewhere in the middle of the year passed in Bleston, becomes, by contrast, more and more dense and complex, which is reflected by an increasinly complex narration used to describe the past. However, at the moment Revel is leaving the city, he is still unable to recall and to describe the events of the 29th of February 1952. This gap, this absence, symbolizes his defeat as the narrator, and, in the same time, the human memory’s limits. In Degrees temporal and spatial structures are also very important. This time round, however, the problems of the narration itself, become predominant. Considered from this point of view, the novel announces Gerard Genette’s work Narrative Discourse and his theoretical discussion of two narratological categories: narrative voice and narrative mode. Having transgressed his narrative competences, Pierre Vernier, the narrator of the first and the second parts of the novel, who, taking as a starting point, a complete account of one hour at school, tries to describe the whole world and various aspects of the human civilization for the benefit of his nephew, Pierre Eller, must fail and disappear, as the narrator, from the third part, which is narrated by another narrator, less audacious and more credible.


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