Rimbaud Fictions: Pierre Michon and William Marx
In "Rimbaud le fils" (Gallimard, 1991), Pierre Michon does not pursue the traditional goal of a biographer: to uncover new facts about Arthur Rimbaud or to supplement existing studies. Rather, he delves into the personality and intimacy of the poet's writing in order to ultimately find his own literary voice. William Marx (Minuit, 2005) views Rimbaud's silence as a point at which an era of belief in the absolute power of literature definitively came to an end, plunging modern literature into an existential crisis from which it has not yet fully emerged. This means that Michon's book itself could become an object of Marx's analysis: as a work that perpetuates the "mythologizing" of Rimbaud and thus contributes to maintaining the discourse on the "death to literature," even if it does so in a personal-artistic rather than a historical-sociological way.
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