Char, René - Paulène Aspel (essay date spring 1968)
Paulène Aspel (essay date spring 1968)
SOURCE: Aspel, Paulène. “The Poetry of Rene Char, or Man Reconciled [1968].” World Literature Today 63, no. 2 (spring 1989): 205-08.
[In the following essay, which was originally published in 1968, Aspel comments on Char's career as a poet, observing how the poet uses certain symbols to portray the “opposite, ambiguous human behaviors.”]
At the age of sixty, with twenty volumes of poetry published, René Char is considered by more and more critics in France as the greatest living French poet. Albert Camus had made such a claim for him as early as 1951, in L'homme révolté, when he greeted him as “poète de notre renaissance,” and in the preface he wrote for Char's Dichtungen, an anthology compiled in Germany in 1959, he declared that no such voice had been heard since the pre-Socratics. In 1962 Char was placed among the constellations whose “feux sont sûrs et...
[The entire page is 3094 words long]
Join eNotes
Over 3,500 study guides, question and answer forums, literature criticism, reference content, and much more!
Navigate
- Introduction
- Principal Works
-
Criticism
- Kenneth Douglas (essay date fall-winter 1948)
- Wallace Fowlie (essay date 1958)
- Times Literary Supplement (review date 21 October 1965)
- Paulène Aspel (essay date spring 1968)
- Virginia A. LaCharité (essay date 1968)
- Virginia A. LaCharité (essay date spring 1976)
- Mary Ann Caws (essay date 1977)
- Mary Ann Caws (essay date 1977)
- Paulène Aspel (review date spring 1980)
- James R. Lawler (review date spring 1984)
- John Porter Houston (essay date September 1985)
- Virginia A. LaCharité (essay date 1989)
- Charles D. Minahen (essay date fall-winter 1989)
- Michael Worton (essay date 1992)
- Jean Starobinski (essay date 1994)
- Michael Bishop (essay date 1994)
- Van Kelly (essay date winter 1995)
- Van Kelly (essay date 2001)
- Further Reading
- Copyright
