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Jacques Roubaud

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Name
  
Jacques Roubaud

Role
  
Poet

Jacques Roubaud olivierrollerfreefrroubaudjacques01jpg
Nominations
  
Neustadt International Prize for Literature

Books
  
Les animaux de tout le, Quelque chose noir, The Great Fire of London, Some Thing Black, Hortense Is Abducted

Similar People
  
Florence Delay, Georges Perec, Jane Austen, Val McDermid, Bernard Noel

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Jacques Roubaud (born 1932 in Caluire-et-Cuire, Rhone) is a French poet and mathematician.

Contents

Jacques Roubaud is a professor of poetry at the European Graduate School in Saas-Fee, Switzerland, and he was a professor of Mathematics at University of Paris X. He is a retired Poetry professor from EHESS and a member of the Oulipo group, he has also published poetry, plays, novels, and translated English poetry and books into French such as Lewis Carroll's The Hunting of the Snark. French poet and novelist Raymond Queneau had Roubaud's first book, a collection of mathematically structured sonnets, published by Editions Gallimard, and then invited Roubaud to join the Oulipo as the organization's first new member outside the founders.

Jacques Roubaud BOMB Magazine Jacques Roubaud by Marcella Durand

Roubaud's fiction often suppresses the rigorous constraints of the Oulipo (while mentioning their suppression, thereby indicating that such constraints are indeed present), yet takes the Oulipian self-consciousness of the writing act to an extreme. This simultaneity both appears playfully, in his Hortense novels, Our Beautiful Heroine, Hortense in Exile, and Hortense is Abducted, and with gravity and reflection in The Great Fire of London, considered the pinnacle of his prose. The Great Fire of London (1989), The Loop (1993), and Mathematics (2012) are the first three volumes of a long, experimental, autobiographical work known as "the project" (or "the minimal project"), and the only volumes of "the project", at present, to have been translated into English. Seven volumes of "the project" have been completed and published in French. To compose The Loop, Roubaud began with a childhood memory of a snowy night in Carcassonne and then wrote nightly, without returning to correct his writing from previous nights. Roubaud’s goals in writing The Loop were to discover, "My own memory, how does it work?", and to "destroy" his memories through writing them down.

Jacques Roubaud Quotes by Jacques Roubaud Like Success

Roubaud has participated in readings and lectures at the European Graduate School (2007), the Salon du Livre de Paris (2008), and the "Dire Poesia" series at Palazzo Leoni Montanari in Venice (2011).

Jacques Roubaud Quotes by Jacques Roubaud Like Success

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Works in translation

  • Our Beautiful Heroine. Trans. David Kornacker. Woodstock, NY: Overlook Press, 1987.
  • Hortense is Abducted. Trans. Dominic Di Bernardi. Elmwood Park, IL : Dalkey Archive Press, 1989.
  • Some Thing Black. Trans. Rosmarie Waldrop. Photographs by Alix Cleo Roubaud. Elmwood Park, IL: Dalkey Archive Press, 1990.
  • The Great Fire of London: A Story with Interpolations and Bifurcations. Trans. Dominic Di Bernardi. Elmwood Park, IL, USA: Dalkey Archive Press, 1991.
  • Hortense in Exile. Trans. Dominic Di Bernardi. Normal, IL: Dalkey Archive Press, 1992.
  • The Princess Hoppy, or The Tale of Labrador. Trans. Bernard Hœpffner. Normal, IL: Dalkey Archive Press, 1993.
  • The Plurality of Worlds of Lewis. Trans. Rosmarie Waldrop. Normal, IL: Dalkey Archive Press, 1995.
  • The Form of a City Changes Faster, Alas, than the Human Heart: 150 Poems, 1991-1998. Trans. Rosmarie Waldrop and Keith Waldrop. Normal, IL: Dalkey Archive Press, 2006.
  • Poetry, etcetera: Cleaning House. Trans. Guy Bennett. Los Angeles: Green Integer, 2006.
  • The Loop. Trans. Jeff Fort. Champaign, IL: Dalkey Archive Press, 2009.
  • Exchanges on Light. Trans. Eleni Sikelianos. Iowa City: La Presse, 2009.
  • Mathematics. Trans. Ian Monk. Champaign, IL: Dalkey Archive Press, 2012.
  • References

    Jacques Roubaud Wikipedia