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Francois Marie Banier

Francois Marie Banier( )
Contribution by: Sarraute, Nathalie
Mastroianni, Marcello
Saint Laurent, Yves
Mangano, Silvana
ISBN:978-88-8158-286-0
Publication Date:Aug 2000
Publisher:Charta
Book Format:Paperback
List Price:USD $45.00
Book Description:

Photographs by Francois Marie Banier.

Book Details
Pages:192
Detailed Subjects: Photography / Individual Photographers / General
Physical Dimensions (W X L X H):9.5 x 11.75 x 0.77 Inches
Book Weight:3.14 Pounds
Author Biography
(Contribution by)
Nathalie Sarraute has been an eloquent spokesperson and theorist of the new novel, as well as one of its most talented practitioners. In her essay on the art of fiction, The on The Age of Suspicion (1956), she condemned the techniques used in the novel of the past and took a stand beside Robbe-Grillet as a leader of the avant-garde. The novel, she feels, must express "that element of indetermination, of opacity, and mystery that one's own actions always have for the one who lives them." Her works have now become known to an international public. Her ability to render fleeting awareness and the psychological states underlying articulate speech has won both praise and disdain. Janet Flanner has called Sarraute "the only one among the New Novel experimenters who appears finally to have struck her own style---intense, observational, and personal." Of her novels, The Golden Fruits (1963)---about the Paris literary fortunes of an imaginary novel of the same name---is "the most barren of extraneous decor, the most accomplished from the standpoint of her esthetic aims" (SRSR). Tropisms (1939), her earliest (very brief) book, contains "all the raw material I have continued to develop in my later works." Her "tropisms," she says, are instinctive "sensations," or even "movements," "produced in us by the presence of others, or by objects from the outside world. [They hide] beneath the most commonplace conversations and the most everyday gestures." She regards her novels as composed of a series of tropisms of varying intensity.

Sarraute died at the age of 99 in Paris, France.

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