Louis Aragon
ANICET OR THE PANORAMA


£17.50

Translated and introduced by Antony Melville, and the runner-up to the 2017 Scott-Moncrieff Translation Prize.

This novel, much of it written amidst the horror of the trenches when Louis Aragon was a medical orderly during the First World War, demonstrates the chasm that separates the works of the artists and writers of what would become Dadaism and those, say, of the English war poets.

In a world of moral destitution beyond any rational forbearance, what can remain? How can one write at all, let alone something as absurd as a novel? Anicet or the Panorama is both a roman à clef (Aragon’s friends, including André Breton, are recognisable) and a novel of the total liquidation of a culture that had allowed this to come to pass: even literary heroes must be confronted and superseded. As fast-paced, funny and surprising as a Hollywood silent movie, its narrative of fabulous crimes and scandals sweeps through a panorama of Parisian society as its protagonist Anicet becomes subordinated to the mysterious Mire, a woman who is the incarnation of “modern beauty”. Anicet is seduced into a life of crime, which he accepts with nonchalance and an ironic integrity that he maintains to the bitter end of his journey of self-immolation.

Aragon’s precisely crafted and sardonic prose reveals a world that is no more than a tragic puppet show, with every scene self-evidently staged. This furious tempest of a book launched Aragon’s career and is one of the cornerstones of the Paris Dada movement. Despite the fact that he went on to become one of the most prolific and influential French writers of the twentieth century, it is not at all unreasonable to consider this book to be his greatest work.

NOTE: There is an important erratum to this title. The copyright notice has been inadvertently omitted, so with full apologies to Editions Gallimard we state it clearly here: Anicet ou le Panorama, © Editions Gallimard, Paris, 1921, renewed 1949.

Atlas Anti-classic 22.

See reviews.

2016, ISBN: 978-1-900565-69-1, 208pp, hardback with decorated endpapers.
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SKU: 978-1-900565-69-1 Categories: ,

Additional information

Weight .42 kg
Dimensions 17.5 × 19.5 cm