ROBBE-GRILLET, ALAIN


Meaning of ROBBE-GRILLET, ALAIN in English

born Aug. 18, 1922, Brest, Fr. a representative writer and leading theoretician of the nouveau roman (new novel), the French anti-novel that emerged in the 1950s. He also became a screenwriter and film director. Trained as a statistician and agronomist, he claimed to write novels for his time, especially attentive to the ties that exist between objects, gestures, and situations, avoiding all psychological and ideological commentary' on the actions of the characters (Pour un nouveau roman, 1963; Toward a New Novel; Essays on Fiction). Robbe-Grillet's world is neither meaningful nor absurd; it merely exists. Omnipresent is the objecthard, polished, with only the measurable characteristics of pounds, inches, and wavelengths of reflected light. It overshadows and eliminates plot and character. The story is composed of recurring images, either actually recorded by an objective eye or drawn from reminiscences and dreams. If Robbe-Grillet's fiction, with its timetables, careful inventories of things, and reports on arrivals and departures, owes anything to the traditional novel, it is to the detective story. His first work, Les Gommes (1953; The Erasers), deals with a murder committed by the man who has come to investigate it. Le Voyeur (1955; The Voyeur) deals with the murder of a young girl by a passing stranger. In La Jalousie (1957; Jealousy), a jealous husband views the actions of his wife and her suspected lover through a louvre shutter (jalousie). Among his later novels are Dans le labyrinthe (1959; In the Labyrinth), Instantans (1962; Snapshots), La Maison de rendez-vous (1966; The House of Assignation), Projet pour une rvolution New York (1970; Project for a Revolution in New York), Topologie d'une cit famtme (1976; Topology of a Phantom City), Un Rgicide (1978; A Regicide) and Djinn (1981). There have been many translations of his commentaries on fiction, Pour un nouveau roman. Robbe-Grillet's techniques were dramatized in the motion pictures he directed, among them L'Immortelle (1963; The Immortal), Trans-Europ-Express (1966), and L'Homme qui ment (1968; The Man Who Lies). His best-known work in the medium, however, is the screenplay for Alain Resnais's film L'Anne dernire Marienbad (1961; Last Year at Marienbad). Ultimately, his work raises questions about the ambiguous relationship of objectivity and subjectivity.

Britannica English vocabulary.      Английский словарь Британика.