Margins
Écoutez-voir book cover
Écoutez-voir
1968
First Published
4.00
Average Rating
360
Number of Pages
""Écoutez-voir"... locution populaire, entrée en matière, demande d'attention, proposition de dire et de montrer. La langue, moyen de communication entre les hommes, moyen de sortir de la solitude... II y en a qui se parlent tout seuls pour tromper leur faim de dialogue. Penser à haute voix, cela se fait au théâtre ; le monologue intérieur se pratique dans le texte silencieux du roman. L'auteur, l'homme-orchestre, le ventriloque, y fait parler tous ses personnages, révélant parfois sa propre identité : c'est moi, l'auteur qui vous parle. Madeleine, la veuve, est le personnage principal d'Écoutez-voir. Elle se raconte et se montre elle-même, elle est racontée et montrée par d'autres personnages, secondaires, qui sont là pour parler d'elle. L'auteur ne joue qu'un rôle épisodique. J'ai supposé que Madeleine - d'abord socialement définie - soumise à des forces centrifuges intérieures et extérieures, se trouve rejetée loin du centre commun. La voilà excentrique. Elle est le verbe irrégulier confirmant l'existence des réguliers. Progressivement et sûrement, la masse des réguliers la dépouille de tout, l'écrase comme une division blindée qui passe sur un corps de tendre chair sans même le remarquer. On n'a qu'à la porter disparue, dans la rubrique des pertes. Ou du refus." Elsa Triolet.
Avg Rating
4.00
Number of Ratings
1
5 STARS
0%
4 STARS
100%
3 STARS
0%
2 STARS
0%
1 STARS
0%
goodreads

Author

Elsa Triolet
Elsa Triolet
Author · 13 books

Elsa Yur'evna Triolet (September 24 1896 - June 16, 1970) was a French writer. Born Ella Kagan (Russian: Элла Каган) into a Jewish family of a lawyer and a music teacher in Moscow, she and her sister, Lilya Brik received excellent educations; they were able to speak fluent German and French and play the piano. Elsa graduated from the Moscow Institute of Architecture. Elsa enjoyed poetry and in 1915 befriended the aspiring futurist poet and graphic artist Vladimir Mayakovsky. When she invited him home, the poet fell madly in love with her older sister Lilya, who was married to Osip Brik. Elsa was the first to translate Mayakovsky's poetry (as well as volumes of other Russian-language poetry) to French. In 1918, at the outset of Russian Civil War, Elsa married the French cavalry officer André Triolet and emigrated to France, but for years in her letters to Lilya Elsa admitted to being heartbroken. Later she divorced Triolet. In the early 1920s, Elsa described her visit to Tahiti in her letters to Victor Shklovsky, who subsequently showed them to Maxim Gorky. Gorky suggested that the author should consider a literary career. The 1925 book In Tahiti, written in Russian, was based on these letters. In 1928 Elsa met French writer Louis Aragon. They married and stayed together for 42 years. She influenced Aragon to join the French Communist Party. Triolet and Aragon fought in the French Resistance. In 1944 Triolet was the first woman to be awarded the Prix Goncourt. She died, aged 73, in Moulin de Villeneuve, Saint-Arnoult-en-Yvelines, France of a heart attack. In 2010, La Poste, the French post office, issued three stamps honoring Triolet.

548 Market St PMB 65688, San Francisco California 94104-5401 USA
© 2026 Paratext Inc. All rights reserved