Rimbaud Fictions: Alain Blottière
Alain Blottière's novel "Azur noir" (2020) can be interpreted as "Rimbaud fiction," in which the protagonist, Léo, develops an obsessive and transformative relationship with the French poet Arthur Rimbaud. For Léo, Rimbaud is not merely a literary figure but becomes a central element of his personal experience, his perception of the world, and his creative development, particularly within an apocalyptic scenario of the "end of the world." The novel unfolds a rich intertextuality that extends to biographical details, poetic concepts, and thematic parallels. The narrative is set in a context of the end of the world ("fin du monde"), characterized by extreme heat waves, fires, floods, and environmental disasters. Léo finds this present unbearable, and the "Rimbaud fiction" becomes his "ultimate refuge." Rimbaud's world, as Léo perceives it in his visions, is a "paradise" without the horrors of the present – a Paris before industrialization, full of horses, clean air and untouched nature.
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