我要吃瓜

Book Chapter

Henri Michaux: Poète du vingtième siècle?

Details

Citation

Parish N (2009) Henri Michaux: Poète du vingtième siècle?. In: Fels L (ed.) Regards sur la poésie du XXe siècle. Presses universitaires de Namur/Editions namuroises/Editions poiêtês: Les éditions namuroises, pp. 373-394.

Abstract
This chapter was an invited contribution to the first of three significant volumes, published in French, about poetry in the twentieth century. Each chapter presents one poet and analyses the particularities of their creative practice. This chapter analyses the important position occupied by Henri Michaux in both literary and artistic worlds. Creative stances in his output are identified which are arguably typical of twentieth-century creators, such as his suspicious attitude towards language, but also others that emphasise his iconoclasm and his desire to remain a marginal figure. This chapter comments on the violent, oppositional tone and subject matter of his early poetry, on affinities with his literary and artistic contemporaries, on the possibility of exorcism through language and the word and the more contemplative nature of his later publications. It also examines his infamous experimentation with hallucinogenic substances and his quest for a universal language throughout his artistic and literary career. This analysis leads to the conclusion that it is the space between which characterises Michaux’s work: between writing and drawing, science and mysticism, refusals and exorcism. This article offers a clear overview and analysis of Michaux’s contribution to twentieth-century poetics and brings my own work to a wider, French-reading, public.

Keywords
Henri Michaux Iconoclasm Universal Language Poetry Experimentation

StatusPublished
Funders
Publication date31/12/2009
PublisherLes éditions namuroises
Place of publicationPresses universitaires de Namur/Editions namuroises/Editions poiêtês
ISBN9782930378619

People (1)

Professor Nina Parish

Professor Nina Parish

Professor in French & Francophone, Literature and Languages - Division