Warren Motte (ed.): Oulipo: A Primer of Potential Literature (1998)

3 September 2013, dusan

This is an amazing anthology of writings by members of the group known as Oulipo, including, among others, Italo Calvino, Harry Mathews, Georges Perec, Jacques Roubaud, and Raymond Queneau. Put simply, this group, which was founded in Paris in 1960, approaches creative writing in a way that still has yet to make its impact in the United States and its creative writing programs.

Rather than inspiration, rather than experience, rather than self-expression, the Oulipians viewed imaginative writing as an exercise dominated by what they called “constraints.” Quite commonly, they would attempt to write stories, for instance, in which strict rules had to be imposed and followed (for example, Georges Perec’s notorious novel A Void, which was written without the use of the letter “e”).

While a major contribution to literary theory, Oulipo is perhaps most distinguished as an indispensable guide to writers.

Foreword by Noel Arnaud
Publisher Dalkey Archive Press, 1998
French Literature series
ISBN 9781564781871
224 pages

publisher

PDF (no OCR)


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