Le Paysan de Paris
Le Paysan de Paris is a surrealist book about places in Paris. Written by Louis Aragon, it was first published in 1926 by Editions Gallimard.
Author | Louis Aragon |
---|---|
Genre | Surrealism |
Publisher | Editions Gallimard |
Publication date | 1926 |
It was dedicated to the surrealist painter André Masson and its preface was on the theme of a modern mythology. The two main sections of the books describe two places in Paris in great detail: Le Passage de l'Opera and Parc des Buttes-Chaumont. The detailed descriptions provide a realistic backdrop for surrealist spectacles such as the transformation of a shop into a seascape in which a siren appears and then disappears. This literary device is le merveilleux quotidien — a contrast of the mundane with the marvellous.[1]
Arnold Bennett described the work as stimulating but uneven. He thought it the best of the six books which he bought in Paris when visiting there in 1927.[1] Walter Benjamin was deeply affected by the book, which became a point of departure for his unfinished magnum opus, The Arcades Project.[2] Louis Aragon was disappointed with the book's reception by the French literary establishment which he considered too bourgeois and commercial.[3]
References
- Peter Edgerly Firchow (2003), "Nadja and Le Paysan de Paris", Reluctant modernists, ISBN 978-3-8258-5962-6
- "Walter Benjamin". The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University. 2021.
- Robin Walz (2000), Pulp surrealism: insolent popular culture in early twentieth-century Paris, ISBN 978-0-520-21619-8