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Pierre Bayard: How to talk about books you haven’t read
16/01/2008 at 08:00
'How to Talk About Books You Haven’t Read'
author Pierre Bayard in discussion
Wednesday 16 January, 7.30pm at the Institut français
There are infinitely more books than anyone can read in a lifetime. In How to Talk About Books You Haven’t Read, Pierre Bayard looks at the variety of different ways we talk about books we’ve not read; but find that we have opinions about regardless – such as the latest Man Booker Prize winner, a classical text, a celebrity biography or a massive bestseller. There are books that we have skimmed and others that we’ve just forgotten; books we’ve heard discussed so much it feels as though we have read them and others we feel we can judge simply by looking at the jacket.
Pierre Bayard argues that it’s more important to know the location of a book in our culture and its relationship to other books than to have actually read it, and underpins his argument with discussions of tests from Oscar Wilde to Montaigne to Graham Greene.
He shares tips on how to discuss a book you haven’t read with the author, and how to review an unread book, and shows how the most creative conversations can be had with someone else who hasn’t read the book either. At its heart though, this is a book about the experience of reading, what reading means to all us, and how books – read or not read – form our identity.
Pierre Bayard (b. 1954) is a professor of French literature at the University of Paris VIII and a psychoanalyst. How to read books you haven’t read is Bayard’s eighth book in the ‘Paradoxes’ series published by Editions de minuit. In them, he has argued for Freud to be read in the light of Laclos (Le Paradoxe du menteur, 1993) and Maupassant (Maupassant, juste avant Freud, 1994) rather than the other way around, and for a version of A la recherche du temps perdu shorn of its digressions (Le hors-sujet, Proust et la digression, 1996). His Comment améliorer les oeuvres ratées (2000) suggests ways in which the reader can take pleasure from second-rate books by imagining how they would have been written by better authors or by undiscovered authors, such as themselves, while his Enquête sur Hamlet, Le dialogue des sourds (2002) suggests a provocative answer to the question: Who killed Hamlet’s dad? (Answer: Hamlet!).
Tickets: £3, conc. £2
Venue:
Institut français
17 Queensberry Place
London SW7 2DT
Tel: 020 7073 1350
www.institut-francais.org.uk
Event's details
- Where: Institut Français
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