Rimbaud fictions: Thierry Beinstingel
Beinstingel's novel, "Vie prolongée d'Arthur Rimbaud" (Fayard, 2016), stages a provocative uchronia by retelling the literary legend of Arthur Rimbaud as a continuation of his life beyond the officially recognized year of his death, 1891. At its heart lies the dual identity of the poet, who survives his illness under the name Nicolas Cabanis and begins a new, seemingly mundane life as a businessman and family man, while the "dead" Arthur Rimbaud becomes a legend in the European literary scene. The novel explores the tension between the "living" Nicolas, who denies his poetic legacy, and the "dead" Arthur, whose fame is posthumously constructed by literary critics and his sister Isabelle.
➙ To the article