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NACI TEXTOS DE LA MEMORIA Y EL OLVIDO book cover
NACI TEXTOS DE LA MEMORIA Y EL OLVIDO
1990
First Published
3.65
Average Rating
112
Number of Pages

Deliciosos textos breves de Perec sobre la memoria y la escritura: recuerdos, deseos, sueños, proyectos... Este libro aborda uno de los temas que obsesionaron a Georges Perec, y sobre los que este construyó una parte relevante de su fascinante literatura: la memoria. Los textos aquí reunidos evocan y enumeran recuerdos, tanto personales (su nacimiento, una escapada infantil a los once años por las calles del París de la posguerra, un salto en paracaídas que rememora en estado de ebriedad durante una reunión de escritores...) como colectivos (la emigración judía a Estados Unidos, vinculada con su proyecto de libro y película sobre Ellis Island). Hay también en estas páginas sueños y reflexiones sobre los recuerdos reales y ficticios, sobre cómo nacen y cómo los articulamos, además de apuntes sobre proyectos que le rondaban por la cabeza a Perec, que se los cuenta al editor Maurice Nadeau en una carta, y una de esas listas a las que eran tan aficionados él y otros miembros del OuLiPo. La que aquí se incluye consigna treinta y siete cosas que el autor quiere hacer antes de morir, entre otras visitar el Museo del Prado, beber ron de una botella rescatada del fondo del mar como el capitán Haddock, aprender el oficio de impresor, escribir una novela de ciencia ficción, emborracharse con Malcolm Lowry, conocer a Nabokov... La temprana muerte de Perec dejó inconclusa una obra que explora como pocas las posibilidades de la escritura concebida como juego y experimentación. Los textos recopilados en este volumen nos devuelven al Perec más inteligente, ingenioso, lúdico y lúcido, que se sirve de la escritura para fijar la memoria y no deja de indagar en las formas literarias. Y es que, en palabras del propio autor, «el libro es la huella de esa búsqueda infructuosa bajo la que aparece en forma de filigrana el recorrido de la escritura en busca de su verdad: un juego con unas reglas muy sencillas, pero en el que la partida resulta desesperadamente complicada.»

Avg Rating
3.65
Number of Ratings
445
5 STARS
15%
4 STARS
45%
3 STARS
30%
2 STARS
8%
1 STARS
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Author

Georges Perec
Georges Perec
Author · 28 books

Georges Perec was a highly-regarded French novelist, filmmaker, and essayist. He was a member of the Oulipo group. Many of his novels and essays abound with experimental wordplay, lists, and attempts at classification, and they are usually tinged with melancholy. Born in a working-class district of Paris, Perec was the only son of Icek Judko and Cyrla (Schulewicz) Peretz, Polish Jews who had emigrated to France in the 1920s. He was a distant relative of the Yiddish writer Isaac Leib Peretz. Perec's first novel, Les Choses (Things: A Story of the Sixties) was awarded the Prix Renaudot in 1965. In 1978, Perec won the prix Médicis for Life: A User's Manual (French title, La Vie mode d'emploi), possibly his best-known work. The 99 chapters of this 600 page piece move like a knight's tour of a chessboard around the room plan of a Paris apartment building, describing the rooms and stairwell and telling the stories of the inhabitants. Cantatrix Sopranica L. is a spoof scientific paper detailing experiments on the "yelling reaction" provoked in sopranos by pelting them with rotten tomatoes. All the references in the paper are multi-lingual puns and jokes, e.g. "(Karybb et Scyla, 1973)". Perec is also noted for his constrained writing: his 300-page novel La disparition (1969) is a lipogram, written without ever using the letter "e". It has been translated into English by Gilbert Adair under the title A Void (1994). The silent disappearance of the letter might be considered a metaphor for the Jewish experience during the Second World War. Since the name 'Georges Perec' is full of 'e's, the disappearance of the letter also ensures the author's own 'disappearance'. His novella Les revenentes (1972) is a complementary univocalic piece in which the letter "e" is the only vowel used. This constraint affects even the title, which would conventionally be spelt Revenantes. An English translation by Ian Monk was published in 1996 as The Exeter Text: Jewels, Secrets, Sex in the collection Three. It has been remarked by Jacques Roubaud that these two novels draw words from two disjoint sets of the French language, and that a third novel would be possible, made from the words not used so far (those containing both "e" and a vowel other than "e"). W ou le souvenir d'enfance, (W, or, the Memory of Childhood, 1975) is a semi-autobiographical work which is hard to classify. Two alternating narratives make up the volume: one, a fictional outline of a totalitarian island country called "W", patterned partly on life in a concentration camp; and the second, descriptions of childhood. Both merge towards the end when the common theme of the Holocaust is explained. Perec was a heavy smoker throughout his life, and was diagnosed with lung cancer in 1981. He died the following year in Ivry-sur-Seine at only forty-five-years old. His ashes are held at the columbarium of the Père Lachaise Cemetery. David Bellos wrote an extensive biography of Perec: Georges Perec: A Life in Words, which won the Académie Goncourt's bourse for biography in 1994.

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