One of the French avant-garde icons, author Alain
Robbe-Grillet passed away on Monday. He was 85 years old.
Robbe-Grillet died at the Caen
University Hospital
in western France.
He was hospitalized during the week-end due to cardiac problems.
Robbe-Grillet became made a name for his innovative writing
style, which had a significant influence in the foundation of what is called
“the new novel.” The current was initiated in the 1950s and includes names such
as Nobel Prize laureate Claude Simon, Michel Butor and Nathalie Sarraute. The
group’s works revolutionized literature, breaking the accepted rules of writing
such as plot and character development, chronology, chapters or punctuation.
The first steps towards “the new novel” were made in the
author’s “Les Gommes” (The Erasers) in 1953. The work depicted the story of a
detective who investigates an apparent murder, but it is he in the end who
slays the victim. Continuing with the innovative style, he won the France's
Critics Prize with “Le Voyeur” (The Voyeur) in 1955, a novel imagining the
world through the eyes of a sadistic killer.
Robbe-Grillet’s “Pour Un Nouveau Roman” (Toward a New Novel)
of 1963 became a programmatic work for the French avant-gardism.
But the talent of the trained agronomist-turned writer went
further literature. Robbe-Grillet focused also on cinematography, writing the
screenplays for acclaimed movie such as Alain Resnais’ “Last Year At
Marienbad.”
The writer became a member of France’s Legion of Honor and of the
elite of Academie Francaise, being one of the 40 “immortals” of the prestigious
institution.
President Nicolas Sarkozy issued a statement saying that
Alain Robbe-Grillet’s passing away signified that Academie Francaise had lost “without a doubt
its most rebellious” member and “an
entire section of French intellectual and literary history has disappeared.”
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