Paromita’s Reviews > Georges Perec: A Life in Words > Status Update
Paromita
is on page 200 of 1009
So far, a really good biography.
What a childhood, scars of WWII and Jewish identity. Never goes away. The struggles of an artist.
— Feb 08, 2024 03:10AM
What a childhood, scars of WWII and Jewish identity. Never goes away. The struggles of an artist.
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Paromita
is on page 624 of 1009
"I detest what’s called psychology, especially in fiction. I prefer books in which characters are described by their actions, their gestures, and their surroundings. [ . . . ] It’s something that belongs to the great tradition of realism in the English and German novel of the nineteenth century, which I’ve exaggerated a little, almost taking it to hyperrealism."
Georges Perec, speaking in Warsaw on 5 April 1981
— Feb 08, 2024 04:00AM
Georges Perec, speaking in Warsaw on 5 April 1981
Paromita
is on page 391 of 1009
Oulipo is here.
"The name OuLiPo stands for Ouvroir de Littérature Potentielle, or “Workshop for Potential Literature”."
— Feb 08, 2024 03:43AM
"The name OuLiPo stands for Ouvroir de Littérature Potentielle, or “Workshop for Potential Literature”."
Paromita
is on page 324 of 1009
From an essay by Perec
"There is no epoch, no condition, no crisis that the mind cannot grasp;...no situation that cannot be mastered, no phenomenon that reason and language, feeling and rationality cannot conquer. Out of the collapse of Germany came Doktor Faustus; it was on his return from a concentration camp that Robert Antelme wrote L’Espèce humaine, one of the finest books to the glory of mankind."
— Feb 08, 2024 03:30AM
"There is no epoch, no condition, no crisis that the mind cannot grasp;...no situation that cannot be mastered, no phenomenon that reason and language, feeling and rationality cannot conquer. Out of the collapse of Germany came Doktor Faustus; it was on his return from a concentration camp that Robert Antelme wrote L’Espèce humaine, one of the finest books to the glory of mankind."

