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''Paradis'' is a 1981 novel by French novelist
Philippe Sollers Philippe Sollers (; born Philippe Joyaux; 28 November 1936) is a French writer and critic. In 1960 he founded the ''avant garde'' literary journal ''Tel Quel'' (along with writer and art critic Marcelin Pleynet), which was published by Le Se ...
. Sollers conceived the book as a literary homage to Dante's '' Paradiso''. Noted by critics for its lack of punctuation, ''Paradis'' has been compared to ''
The Cantos ''The Cantos'' by Ezra Pound is a long, incomplete poem in 120 sections, each of which is a ''canto''. Most of it was written between 1915 and 1962, although much of the early work was abandoned and the early cantos, as finally published, date ...
'' of Ezra Pound and Joyce's ''
Finnegans Wake ''Finnegans Wake'' is a novel by Irish literature, Irish writer James Joyce. It is well known for its experimental style and reputation as one of the most difficult works of fiction in the Western canon. It has been called "a work of fiction whi ...
''. ''Paradis'' was published in three volumes: ''Paradis'', followed later by ''Paradis II'' and ''Paradis III''.


Overview

Sollers described the origins of ''Paradis'' as being traceable to a "creative rage" that first resulted in his book ''Lois'', which marked a departure from the "slightly obsessive ascetic" mode in which he wrote his books ''Drame'' and ''Nombres'', books which he characterized as representing a "period of research into the disposition of writing methods." Sollers said of the book's title, ''Paradis'':
timplies a rewriting of Dante's ''Paradiso'', but it's a paradise that has changed a good deal since Dante's time. Perhaps the phrase which best gives the sense of my title is a sentence from Sade, who says, "Everything is paradise in this hell." I am off to palm off as pleasurable, or at least acceptable, all that would ordinarily be more disturbing, both spiritually and physically. My approach has changed because I've focused attention more radically and integrally on the Bible.
Sollers commented that the book reflects his interest in the "unprecedented period of flux or mutation" of Western culture:
work on ''Paradis'' concentrates on that point. I'm not speaking only of the New Testament. Obviously, I describe Christianity as an adventure at once pathetic and comic. I was inspired by Joyce in this.


Critical reception

Poet and literary critic Hilary Anne Clark has commented on the formal difficulties that ''Paradis'' presents to readers:
Philippe Sollers' ''Paradis'' contains a ... major block to comprehension in that it lacks any form of visual punctuation to guide the reader in making sense, in reconstituting its units of meaning. Each page of ''Paradis'' is a solid, unbroken mass of words, whose visual density is further emphasized by the use of a very black, italicized typescript. Lacking the visual landmarks provided by conventional punctuation practice, the reader can neither encompass the entire work, nor often decide where one unit of sense takes up from a preceding unit or gives way to a succeeding one.
Clark goes on to cite ''Paradis'' as an example of an encyclopedic tendency in literature, comparing it to Joyce's ''Finnegans Wake'' and Pound's ''Cantos'':
The dominance of the encyclopaedic gesture in ''Finnegans Wake'', ''Paradis'' and the ''Cantos'' allows us to account for the characteristic length, obscurity and "bookishness" of these works; they absorb the traits and tensions of essay, Menippean satire and epic while yet exceeding these traits in their fictional translation of the encyclopaedic paradoxes noted above. This translation manifests itself in each work as a characteristic parodic hesitation before the authority of totalizing predecessors; it manifests itself in the texts' fascination with images of a paradisiacal completion and timelessness, a tendency that is undercut by a repetitive, digressive or fragmented form which asserts the inevitability of time and incompletion. Further, the ''Wake'', ''Paradis'' and the ''Cantos'', in their overt and extensive intertextual activity, emphasize the textual boundaries of encyclopaedic knowledge. Nonetheless, in their foregrounding and valorization of speech rhythms, the works also repeat the challenge that the encyclopaedia brings to its own limited nature as written book.
Critics Philip Barnard and Cheryl Lester note that in ''Paradis'', "Sollers achieved a ''tour de force'' of modernist poetics whose clear precedents are Joyce and Faulkner. The powerful narrative voice that emerges in these works foregrounds song, chant, psalmody, and real rhythms that point toward their sources in sacred texts and Dantean ''epos''." Roland Champagne, in his monograph on Philippe Sollers, writes that
The humor of ''Paradis'' is found in its game of messages embedded in apparently unrelated sequences of spoken text. The messages are inserted by the omniscient voice of the poet/writer for the reader to decipher. These are encoded signals that the poet/writer offers as guides through the text. The poet/writer is basically saying that he is the only one who can find the way through this maze of contemporary culture's language.
French literary critic
Roland Barthes Roland Gérard Barthes (; ; 12 November 1915 – 26 March 1980) was a French literary theorist, essayist, philosopher, critic, and semiotician. His work engaged in the analysis of a variety of sign systems, mainly derived from Western popular ...
grouped ''Paradis'' with three other books by Sollers, ''Drame'', '' H'', and ''Lois'', and described these four as books that
have to be referred to as novels because there is no other term to designate them. But they do not tell stories, describe a particular society or present identifiable characters. They are texts of which language itself is the subject, language which is wholly free from the duty to describe. The world which these texts presents is not one which the reader could either identify as her own or see clearly as different from it. In the past, in Barthes' view it was the author's duty to describe such a world which held language unjustifiably captive. One of the reasons he writes with such enthusiasm about Sollers is the way in which texts such as ''Paradis'' and ''Lois'' show what happens when this duty is removed.


''Paradis'' in translation

''Paradis'' has not been translated into English in its entirety, although an English-language excerpt was published in an issue of ''
TriQuarterly ''TriQuarterly'' is a name shared by an American literary magazine and a series of books, both operating under the aegis of Northwestern University Press. The journal is published twice a year and features fiction, nonfiction, poetry, drama, liter ...
'' devoted to works that reflect the influence of Joyce's ''
Finnegans Wake ''Finnegans Wake'' is a novel by Irish literature, Irish writer James Joyce. It is well known for its experimental style and reputation as one of the most difficult works of fiction in the Western canon. It has been called "a work of fiction whi ...
''.


References


Sources

* * * * * * * {{refend 1981 French novels Éditions du Seuil books Novels by Philippe Sollers Works based on Paradiso (Dante) Novels based on the Divine Comedy