L'Extase matérielle
'L'Extase matérielle' is an essay written by French Nobel laureate J. M. G. Le Clézio. The book's title means Material Ecstasy in English. This essay may be advising that we should pay the utmost attention to what there is around us, not to what there might be or ought to be. According to a review of 'L'Extase matérielle' the reasoning behind the essay is to accept that "what there is is all there is"(and to demand more is ludicrous)[1]
Writing style
This essay consists of personal deliberations, discursively written, which are (probably) intended more to provoke his readers than to comfort them. Le Clézio seems to have been motivated to write this essay not just taking ideas from other writers, but also to explain his own research and also to relate his very own perspective on life. The essay is emotionally written.[2]
Principles
This is a collection of essays which explicitly theorize many of the principles Le Clézio himself wrote in Terra Amata. Le Clezio expresses his fondness for small things in these essays.[3]
Themes in L'extase materielle
- Le Clézio meditates about his bedroom
- Le Clézio writes about the woman
- (and about the woman's body)
- Le Clézio writes of love,
- (even of a fly or a spider)
- Le Clézio discourses on writing
- Le Clézio`writes about death
- Le Clézio gives some ideas of what he thinks "an absolute" (of anything) could be
Publication history
First French Edition
- Le Clézio, J M G (1967). L'extase matérielle (in French). Paris: Gallimard. p. 229. ISBN 978-2-07-032745-4.Re-Printed 1971OCLC 82053973
Second French Edition
- Le Clézio, J M G (1993). L'extase matérielle : essai (in French). Mayenne: Impr. Floch. p. 313. ISBN 978-2-07-023824-8.
Third French Edition
- Le Clézio, J M G (2008). L'Extase Materielle (Nobel Prize Literature 2008) (in French). Mayenne: Impr. Floch. p. 221. ISBN 978-0-7859-2838-6.
References
- ^ Sturrock, John (1967-06-22). "L'extase materielle". London,UK: From The Times Literary Supplement. Retrieved 2008-11-18.
(Second paragraph)There are sections in it where the paradoxes are so thick on the ground that the mind can make little headway and it is a great relief when movement is finally restored by a lucid axiom about bow we should try to live. What M. le Clezio proposes above all is that we should pay the utmost attention to what there is around us, not to what there might be or ought to be.
- ^ "L'extase matérielle de J.M.G. Le Clézio[Littérature française XXe]" (in French). evene.fr. Retrieved 2009-02-13.
- ^ "J.M.G. Le Clezio's Terra Amata: A micro-fictional affection for the real". Racevskis, Roland. Romanic Review. 1999-05-01. Retrieved 2009-02-14.
second paragraph/first page
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- v
- t
- e
- Le Procès-Verbal
- Le Jour où Beaumont fit connaissance avec sa douleur
- Le Livre des fuites
- Le déluge
- Terra Amata
- La Guerre
- Voyages de l'autre côté
- Désert
- Le Chercheur d'or
- Wandering Star
- Onitsha
- La Quarantaine
- Poisson d'or
- Hasard suivi de Angoli Mala
- Fantômes dans la rue
- Révolutions
- Ourania
- Ritournelle de la faim
- "The Mexican Dream"
- "Conversations avec J. M. G. Le Clézio"
- "Haï"
- "Mydriase"
- "To the Icebergs (Essay on Henri Michaux)"
- "L'Inconnu sur la Terre"
- "Trois Villes saintes"
- "Dans la maison d'Edith"
- "Sur Lautréamont"
- "Diego et Frida"
- "Ailleurs"
- "Enfances"
- "Le Llano en flammes"
- "L'Extase matérielle"
- ""The African""
- "Une lettre de J. M. G. Le Clézio"
- "Ballaciner"
- "Freedom to Dream" and "Freedom to Speak"
- "On Reading as True Travel"
- "Dans la forêt des paradoxes"
- Les Géants
- Lullaby
- La Grande Vie
- Peuple du ciel
- Balaabilou
- Villa Aurore
- L'enfant de sous le pont
- Celui qui n'avait jamais vu la mer
- La montagne ou le dieu vivant
- Voyage au pays des arbres
- Voyage à Rodrigues
- Gens des nuages
- Raga. Approche du continent invisible