Jacques Abeille (March 17, 1942 – January 23, 2022) was a French writer. Influenced by the
surrealist movement
Surrealism is a cultural movement that developed in Europe in the aftermath of World War I in which artists depicted unnerving, illogical scenes and developed techniques to allow the unconscious mind to express itself. Its aim was, according t ...
, in which he participated in the 1960s and 1970s, he is best known for the
novel cycle
A book series is a sequence of books having certain characteristics in common that are formally identified together as a group. Book series can be organized in different ways, such as written by the same author, or marketed as a group by their pub ...
set in an
imaginary universe
A fictional universe, or fictional world, is a self-consistent setting with events, and often other elements, that differ from the real world. It may also be called an imagined, constructed, or fictional realm (or world). Fictional universes may ...
that started with the publication of (1982). He has also written several collections of
poetry
Poetry (derived from the Greek '' poiesis'', "making"), also called verse, is a form of literature that uses aesthetic and often rhythmic qualities of language − such as phonaesthetics, sound symbolism, and metre − to evoke meanings ...
and
short stories
A short story is a piece of prose fiction that typically can be read in one sitting and focuses on a self-contained incident or series of linked incidents, with the intent of evoking a single effect or mood. The short story is one of the oldest ...
, and is the author of
erotic literature
Erotic literature comprises fictional and factual stories and accounts of eros (passionate, romantic or sexual relationships) intended to arouse similar feelings in readers. This contrasts erotica, which focuses more specifically on sexual feelin ...
, published in part under the pseudonym Léo Barthe.
Jacques Abeille was born on March 17, 1942 in Lyon. An
illegitimate child
Legitimacy, in traditional Western common law, is the status of a child born to parents who are legally married to each other, and of a child conceived before the parents obtain a legal divorce. Conversely, ''illegitimacy'', also known as '' ...
, he was raised by his paternal uncle after his father's death in 1944. During the 1960s he was part of certain circles in Bordeaux that were related to the
surrealist movement
Surrealism is a cultural movement that developed in Europe in the aftermath of World War I in which artists depicted unnerving, illogical scenes and developed techniques to allow the unconscious mind to express itself. Its aim was, according t ...
. In his early 20s he discovered that he suffered from
color blindness
Color blindness or color vision deficiency (CVD) is the decreased ability to see color or differences in color. It can impair tasks such as selecting ripe fruit, choosing clothing, and reading traffic lights. Color blindness may make some aca ...
and such incapacity prevented him from becoming a painter like he originally intended since childhood. He then decided to become a writer instead, at one point expressing "I am a writer on the basis of
einga failed painter."
Abeille started his literary career in 1971 with the publication of his first erotic fiction, , which he published under the pseudonym "Bartleby." He published various erotic stories throughout his life using different pseudonyms.
In 1982, Abeille published the novel , which would become the first installment in the novel cycle , the work for which he is known for in France. This was followed by in 1986 and seven other books in the series in the following years (the last one, , being released in 2020). He has named a number of influences in his overall writing and storytelling including
Gérard de Nerval
Gérard de Nerval (; 22 May 1808 – 26 January 1855) was the pen name of the French writer, poet, and translator Gérard Labrunie, a major figure of French romanticism, best known for his novellas and poems, especially the collection '' Les F ...
,
Blaise Pascal
Blaise Pascal ( , , ; ; 19 June 1623 – 19 August 1662) was a French mathematician, physicist, inventor, philosopher, and Catholic writer.
He was a child prodigy who was educated by his father, a tax collector in Rouen. Pascal's earlies ...
,
Leonora Carrington
Mary Leonora Carrington (6 April 191725 May 2011) was a British-born Mexican artist, surrealist painter, and novelist. She lived most of her adult life in Mexico City and was one of the last surviving participants in the surrealist movement o ...
,
Jean Ray,
Gustav Meyrink
Gustav Meyrink (19 January 1868 – 4 December 1932) was the pseudonym of Gustav Meyer, an Austrian author,
novelist, dramatist, translator, and banker, most famous for his novel '' The Golem''.
He has been described as the "most respected Germa ...
, and
Julien Gracq
Julien Gracq (; 27 July 1910 – 22 December 2007; born Louis Poirier in Saint-Florent-le-Vieil, in the French ''département'' of Maine-et-Loire) was a French writer. He wrote novels, critiques, a play, and poetry. His literary works were note ...
.
Abeille originally wanted to study
ethnology
Ethnology (from the grc-gre, ἔθνος, meaning 'nation') is an academic field that compares and analyzes the characteristics of different peoples and the relationships between them (compare cultural, social, or sociocultural anthropology) ...
but he mentioned his economic conditions and the state of the field at the time as the reasons for which he chose
psychology
Psychology is the scientific study of mind and behavior. Psychology includes the study of conscious and unconscious phenomena, including feelings and thoughts. It is an academic discipline of immense scope, crossing the boundaries betwe ...
instead and in turn leaving that for
philosophy. He was a teaching assistant of philosophy for ten years and later passed the competitive ''
agrégation
In France, the ''agrégation'' () is a competitive examination for civil service in the French public education system. Candidates for the examination, or ''agrégatifs'', become ''agrégés'' once they are admitted to the position of ''profess ...
'' exam in
plastic arts
Plastic arts are art forms which involve physical manipulation of a plastic medium by molding or modeling such as sculpture or ceramics. Less often the term may be used broadly for all the visual arts (such as painting, sculpture, film and p ...
,
[Interview with Jacques Abeille](_blank)
''La Femelle du requin'' magazine, 2018, published by the website En attendant Nadeau, January 30, 2022. earning admission to full teaching status. His teaching career ended in 2002.
In 2010 Abeille received a lifetime achievement award from the
Wepler Prize for his work, as well as the 2015 Jean-Arp Prize for French language literature and the 2021
Grand prix de l'Imaginaire.
Early life
Jacques Abeille was born on March 17, 1942 in the
6th arrondissement of Lyon
6 (six) is the natural number following 5 and preceding 7. It is a composite number and the smallest perfect number.
In mathematics
Six is the smallest positive integer which is neither a square number nor a prime number; it is the second small ...
, the child of an illegitimate relationship. His father, Valentin Abeille (1907-1944) - involved in the
French Resistance
The French Resistance (french: La Résistance) was a collection of organisations that fought the German occupation of France during World War II, Nazi occupation of France and the Collaborationism, collaborationist Vichy France, Vichy régim ...
and opposed to the
Vichy regime
Vichy France (french: Régime de Vichy; 10 July 1940 – 9 August 1944), officially the French State ('), was the fascist French state headed by Marshal Philippe Pétain during World War II. Officially independent, but with half of its terr ...
- was the grandson of a senator sub-prefect. In order to recognize his son (illegal at the time), Valentin Abeille had a family certificate forged by the Resistance network to which he belonged.
After his father's death in 1944, Valentin Abeille's twin brother took in Jacques, raising him "in many ways
..like the ghost of my father" in the words of the writer.
Once the war was over, Jacques Abeille accompanied his uncle, a high civil servant, to his postings.
After having spent some time in
Guadeloupe
Guadeloupe (; ; gcf, label=Antillean Creole, Gwadloup, ) is an archipelago and overseas department and region of France in the Caribbean. It consists of six inhabited islands— Basse-Terre, Grande-Terre, Marie-Galante, La Désirade, and the ...
, the Abeilles settled in
Bordeaux
Bordeaux ( , ; Gascon oc, Bordèu ; eu, Bordele; it, Bordò; es, Burdeos) is a port city on the river Garonne in the Gironde department, Southwestern France. It is the capital of the Nouvelle-Aquitaine region, as well as the prefecture ...
in 1959. The shock of the contrast between this city and the seaside environment where he had lived before, associated with literary reminiscences of
Kafka
Franz Kafka (3 July 1883 – 3 June 1924) was a German-speaking Bohemian novelist and short-story writer, widely regarded as one of the major figures of 20th-century literature. His work fuses elements of realism and the fantastic. It typ ...
's and especially
Gustav Meyrink
Gustav Meyrink (19 January 1868 – 4 December 1932) was the pseudonym of Gustav Meyer, an Austrian author,
novelist, dramatist, translator, and banker, most famous for his novel '' The Golem''.
He has been described as the "most respected Germa ...
's
Prague
Prague ( ; cs, Praha ; german: Prag, ; la, Praga) is the capital and largest city in the Czech Republic, and the historical capital of Bohemia. On the Vltava river, Prague is home to about 1.3 million people. The city has a temperate ...
, was key to the creation of Terrèbre, the capital of the empire of the Contrées, as it appears in (1986).
Career
Adherence to Surrealism

Jacques Abeille frequented the literary and artistic circles of Bordeaux connected with
surrealism
Surrealism is a cultural movement that developed in Europe in the aftermath of World War I in which artists depicted unnerving, illogical scenes and developed techniques to allow the unconscious mind to express itself. Its aim was, according to ...
, in particular the Parapluycha movement, led by Pierre Chaveau, the Mimiague brothers and Alain Tartas. He corresponded with
André Breton
André Robert Breton (; 19 February 1896 – 28 September 1966) was a French writer and poet, the co-founder, leader, and principal theorist of surrealism. His writings include the first ''Surrealist Manifesto'' (''Manifeste du surréalisme'') o ...
, whose entourage invited him to befriend the painter and photographer
Pierre Molinier
Pierre Molinier (April 13, 1900 – March 3, 1976) was a French painter, photographer and "maker of objects".
Biography and works
Born in Agen, France, he lived his life in Bordeaux. He began his career as a painter of landscapes until his wor ...
, living in Bordeaux at the time. Abeille also participated in the work of the surrealist journal La Brèche, founded by Breton in 1961.
In October 1969, three years after the death of André Breton, Jean Schuster declared the end of "historical" Surrealism in "Le Quatrième chant", published in the newspaper ''
Le Monde
''Le Monde'' (; ) is a French daily afternoon newspaper. It is the main publication of Le Monde Group and reported an average circulation of 323,039 copies per issue in 2009, about 40,000 of which were sold abroad. It has had its own website si ...
''. Jacques Abeille was one of those who refused to dissolve the group, and he joined the editorial committee of the ''Bulletin de liaison surréaliste'', which was formed around Micheline and Vincent Bounoure and
Jean-Louis Bédouin. Jacques Abeille wrote a total of four articles for the ten issues of the journal published between 1970 and 1976.
However, his activity in the surrealist movement left few traces: while he is mentioned in the index of Gérard Durozoi's 1997 ''Histoire du mouvement surréaliste'', as well as in
Robert Sabatier
Robert Sabatier (17 August 1923 – 28 June 2012) was a French poet and writer. He wrote numerous novels, essays and books of aphorisms and poems. He was elected to the Académie Goncourt
The Société littéraire des Goncourt (Goncourt ...
's ''L'Histoire de la poésie française du xxe siècle'', where he is mentioned as a surrealist author, he is, on the other hand, absent from the ''Dictionnaire du surréalisme et de ses environs'' edited by Adam Biro and René Passeron (1985), as well as from the database of the Mélusine site of the Centre de recherches sur le surréalisme of the
University of Paris III
The New Sorbonne University (french: Université de la Sorbonne Nouvelle, also known as Paris III) is a public university in Paris, France. It is one of the inheritors of the historic University of Paris, which was completely overhauled and rest ...
.
From painting to literature
Abeille explains having felt the "throbbing desire to be an artist" from childhood, a desire thwarted by "a confused, indecisive and anxious shyness", an incapacity and vague obstacle. He finds the key to unlock it at the end of adolescence, when at the age of twenty-one or twenty-two, while practicing psychology, Abeille discovers he is
color blind
Color blindness or color vision deficiency (CVD) is the decreased ability to see color or differences in color. It can impair tasks such as selecting ripe fruit, choosing clothing, and reading traffic lights. Color blindness may make some aca ...
.
[Daniel Launay, "Lectures de Jacques Abeille", in ''Le Dépossédé'', ] "It was a great crisis and an immense sorrow" explained the author in an interview in 2007,
which led him to give up painting and turn to writing: "I am a writer on the basis of a failed painter", he explained to another correspondent.
Abeille's first book was an erotic story entitled and published in 1971 under the pseudonym Bartleby by the publisher ''L'Or du temps'', directed by Régine Deforges. The text, written between 1967 and 1968, was in response to a dare between friends to write an erotic work. This experience of writing, whose speed surprised him, opened new perspectives beyond his otherwise disappointing previous attempts to write idealized relationships.
Abeille published thereafter a set of erotic texts, under his own name or under pseudonym, the most frequent and the most constant being that of Léo Barthe, who also appears as a character in his famous cycle of novels.
''Les Jardins statuaires'' and the Cycle des Contrées
''Les Jardins statuaires'' (1982) is a novel with dual inspiration. First, from an encounter with a gardener working the earth in which he grew squash: seeing the plasticity of these vegetables inspired in Abeille the image of statues emerging from the ground. Superimposed on this is the an essay in the form of a philosophical tale about artistic creation, perceived not as a technical process (as would have accorded with literary tradition, represented by
Gustave Flaubert
Gustave Flaubert ( , , ; 12 December 1821 – 8 May 1880) was a French novelist. Highly influential, he has been considered the leading exponent of literary realism in his country. According to the literary theorist Kornelije Kvas, "in Flaube ...
for instance), but rather as the artist's accompaniment of an inspiration that pre-existed other works.
[Ivanne Rialland, ''Les Jardins statuaires'' : Le Surréalisme mémoriel de Jacques Abeille, ''Revue critique de fixxion française contemporaine'', 2012.](_blank)
/ref> In the course of writing, noting the absence of women in the tale, which seemed incongruous for a text dealing with artistic inspiration, Abeille came to imagine a story taking place in statuary gardens, from which women, cloistered, are physically excluded, kept as they are in reserved quarters and inaccessible to men or relegated to hotels that are in reality brothel
A brothel, bordello, ranch, or whorehouse is a place where people engage in sexual activity with prostitutes. However, for legal or cultural reasons, establishments often describe themselves as massage parlors, bars, strip clubs, body rub p ...
s.
''Les Jardins statuaires'' was to be published by Régine Desforges, with whom the publishing contract had been signed. But the bankruptcy of the publishing house ''L'Or du temps'' prevented it.["Note biographique", in Jacques Abeille, ''Petites proses plus ou moins brisées'', Arfuyen, 2015, .] Abeille then entrusts the typescript of the novel to Julien Gracq
Julien Gracq (; 27 July 1910 – 22 December 2007; born Louis Poirier in Saint-Florent-le-Vieil, in the French ''département'' of Maine-et-Loire) was a French writer. He wrote novels, critiques, a play, and poetry. His literary works were note ...
, who then gives it to José Corti
José Corti is a bookshop and publishing house located in Paris, France, and was founded in 1925.
It is named after its founder, José Corticchiato (14 January 1895 – 25 December 1984). José Corticchiato started his business by publishing the ...
, historical editor of surrealist publications. But the typescript seems to have been lost and never reaches Corti's hands.["En France on condamne l'imagination", interview with David Caviglioli, BiblioObs, November 19, 2011](_blank)
It is finally Bernard Noël who, several years later, discovers another typed copy of the novel and undertakes to publish it at Flammarion, where he is then editor. But a delay in production of the book hinders its release, which also suffers from the departure of Bernard Noël from his position in 1983. Various other events delay publication of the novel, which inaugurates the Cycle des Contrées, acquiring the status of a cursed novel.
Abeille nevertheless publishes in 1986, still with Flammarion, a second novel: ''Le Veilleur du jour''. Becoming a novelistic cycle, this second instalment is the counterpart of ''Jardins statuaires'': the action of the two novels is more or less simultaneous, and that of the last one is situated at the other end of the empire imagined by Abeille, in the capital city of Terrèbre. A third novel, the first draft of which dates from 1977, evokes the period following the barbarian invasion, in the expectation of which the inhabitants of Terrèbre as well as those of the statuary gardens live. Initially titled ''Un homme plein de misère'', in reference to Pascal's famous formula, it was finally published in 2011 as a double novel: ''Les Barbares'' and ''La Barbarie'', published by Attila.
''La Clef des ombres'', a novel of a significantly different tone from the other novels and short stories, although set in Journelaime, a city in the fictional land, was not included in the cycle for a while, although it was when first published in 1991. After having considered making it the first volume of another novel project entitled "Le Cycle des chambres", ''La Clef des ombres'' was finally reintegrated into the "Cycle des contrées" when it was reissued by the Tripode publishing house in 2020, the year in which ''La Vie de l'explorateur perdu'' was also published, the last novel of the Cycle des contrées in which Brice Cléton, the protagonist of ''La Clef des ombres'', reappears.
The cycle also includes three collections of short stories: ''Les Voyages du fils'' (published for the first time in 2008 and in an expanded edition in 2016), ''Les Chroniques scandaleuses'' de Terrèbre (1995), a collection of erotic short stories signed by Léo Barthe and featuring the characters of ''Le Veilleur du jour'', and finally ''Les Carnets de l'explorateur perdu'', published for the first time in 1993 and then in 2020 in an expanded edition. In addition, two shorter texts, "La Grande danse de la réconciliation", whose narrator is the same as that of the short stories in ''Voyages du fils'' (2016) and which was then included in the new edition of ''Les Carnets de l'explorateur perdu'', as well as ''Les Mers perdues'' (2010) are included in the cycle.
Late recognition
The work of Abeille has long remained little-known. The author even called himself an obscure writer, a situation all the more ironic since the texts of the Cycle des Contrées thematize this obscurity, since they stage, after their writing and publication, their own disappearance through destruction, oblivion or censorship
Censorship is the suppression of speech, public communication, or other information. This may be done on the basis that such material is considered objectionable, harmful, sensitive, or "inconvenient". Censorship can be conducted by governments ...
. This situation changed in 2010, when publisher Attila undertook to reissue the novels of the cycle and, struck by the proximity they detected between Abeille and the Belgian cartoonist and scenographer François Schuiten
François Schuiten (; born 26 April 1956) is a Belgian comic book artist. He is best known for drawing the series '' Les Cités Obscures''.
Biography
François Schuiten was born in Brussels, Belgium in 1956.De Weyer, Geert (2005). "François Sch ...
, the publishers contacted him and offered to illustrate the cover. After reading the novel, Schuiten accepted and even proposed that Abeille write a text to accompany a series of unpublished drawings. This collaboration gave birth to ''Les Mers perdues'', considered by Abeille as a coda
Coda or CODA may refer to:
Arts, entertainment, and media Films
* Movie coda, a post-credits scene
* ''Coda'' (1987 film), an Australian horror film about a serial killer, made for television
*''Coda'', a 2017 American experimental film from Na ...
to the Cycle des Contrées. It is the simultaneous publication of the two works, the one elaborated with Schuiten and the reedition of ''Les Jardins statuaires'', which according to Abeille allowed his work to emerge from the obscurity in which it had been confined until then.
As a sign of this recognition, in 2010 Abeille received a special mention from the Wepler Prize for the whole of his work, also rewarded in 2015 by the Jean-Arp Prize for French-language literature and in 2021 by the Grand prix de l'Imaginaire.
Professional career
After having begun studies in ethnology
Ethnology (from the grc-gre, ἔθνος, meaning 'nation') is an academic field that compares and analyzes the characteristics of different peoples and the relationships between them (compare cultural, social, or sociocultural anthropology) ...
, Jacques Abeille pursued studies in psychology
Psychology is the scientific study of mind and behavior. Psychology includes the study of conscious and unconscious phenomena, including feelings and thoughts. It is an academic discipline of immense scope, crossing the boundaries betwe ...
and then in philosophy, a subject that he taught for ten years as a teaching assistant, and later passed the competitive ''agrégation
In France, the ''agrégation'' () is a competitive examination for civil service in the French public education system. Candidates for the examination, or ''agrégatifs'', become ''agrégés'' once they are admitted to the position of ''profess ...
'' exam in plastic arts
Plastic arts are art forms which involve physical manipulation of a plastic medium by molding or modeling such as sculpture or ceramics. Less often the term may be used broadly for all the visual arts (such as painting, sculpture, film and p ...
, earning admission to full teaching status. His teaching career, which he describes as that of a "banal provincial teacher", was the desire of a "man who, against the singularity of his birth, fights all his life to achieve a banal existence: to exercise a profession without ambition, to constitute a solid couple, to have children and to pamper them." A smooth existence requiring efforts that, to be bearable, had to be tempered by "the need to cultivate a secret garden", which took for Abeille, once painting was abandoned, the form of writing.
Abeille's teaching career ended in 2002.["Note biographique", in Jacques Abeille, ''Petites proses plus ou moins brisées'', Arfuyen, 2015, .]
Writing
On the edge of the French aesthetic and authorial tradition
In his speech written in 2015 on the occasion of the Jean-Arp Prize for French Language Literature, Abeille specified what, in his opinion, differentiates his aesthetic from what he considered dominant in France since the classical period, exemplarily embodied by Nicolas Boileau
Nicolas or Nicolás may refer to:
People Given name
* Nicolas (given name)
Mononym
* Nicolas (footballer, born 1999), Brazilian footballer
* Nicolas (footballer, born 2000), Brazilian footballer
Surname Nicolas
* Dafydd Nicolas (c.1705–1774), ...
's ''L'Art poétique'': the fundamental value given to verisimilitude - of which propriety is a corollary - is assimilated to a censorship rejected by Abeille, noting that this work is situated outside of all verisimilitude, places its action in an indeterminate time and does not even care to maintain a unity of action.[Jacques Abeille,]
Reception speech for the Jean Arp Prize for French Literature
This refusal to be "on the same level" as Abeille is not a reason for the author to be in the same position. According to Abeille, the refusal to register "on the ground of reality" and to mark "against the dictatorship of the verisimilitude and the novelistic canvas" explain why his books "took so much time before collecting a weak echo." Recalling a remark by Gaëtan Picon Gaëtan Picon (19 September 1915 – 6 August 1976) was a French author: essayist, art and literature critic, and art and literature historian. He was director of the ''Mercure de France'' and Director-General of Arts and Letters under André Malrau ...
on this subject, Abeille explains in a 2013 interview that works of pure imagination are only well received in France if written by foreign authors, such as ''Alice in Wonderland
''Alice's Adventures in Wonderland'' (commonly ''Alice in Wonderland'') is an 1865 English novel by Lewis Carroll. It details the story of a young girl named Alice who falls through a rabbit hole into a fantasy world of anthropomorphic creature ...
'' (1865) by Lewis Carroll
Charles Lutwidge Dodgson (; 27 January 1832 – 14 January 1898), better known by his pen name Lewis Carroll, was an English author, poet and mathematician. His most notable works are ''Alice's Adventures in Wonderland'' (1865) and its sequel ...
or ''Gulliver's Travels
''Gulliver's Travels'', or ''Travels into Several Remote Nations of the World. In Four Parts. By Lemuel Gulliver, First a Surgeon, and then a Captain of Several Ships'' is a 1726 prose satire by the Anglo-Irish writer and clergyman Jonathan ...
'' (1726) by Jonathan Swift
Jonathan Swift (30 November 1667 – 19 October 1745) was an Anglo-Irish satirist, author, essayist, political pamphleteer (first for the Whigs, then for the Tories), poet, and Anglican cleric who became Dean of St Patrick's Cathedral, ...
."Jacques Abeille : 'J'écris comme je rêve' "
''Article 11'' magazine, 12 March 2013.
Stylistically, Abeille's absence of
litotes
In rhetoric, litotes (, or ), also known classically as ''antenantiosis'' or ''moderatour'', is a figure of speech and form of verbal irony in which understatement is used to emphasize a point by stating a negative to further affirm a positive, o ...
, favored by classical authors, and the overabundant presence of
redundancy, banished by these same writers, signal another point of divergence from what Abeille calls "the dominant ideology in France."
Another element of this aesthetic is constituted by the way in which the writer's work is envisaged in Boileau: comparable to a
sculptor
Sculpture is the branch of the visual arts that operates in three dimensions. Sculpture is the three-dimensional art work which is physically presented in the dimensions of height, width and depth. It is one of the plastic arts. Durable ...
, his task is to give shape to the raw, uneven, totally shapeless material that constitutes the product of the imagination, before polishing which, by removing roughness, is supposed to give beauty to the finished work. This vision of writing, which for Abeille is embodied by the auctorial figure of Flaubert, consists "at least as much, if not more, in subtracting than in adding."
Now, not only was the novel ''Les Jardins statuaires'' conceived against this idea of the omnipotence of work to the detriment of the imagination, since it was a question of defending the primacy of inspiration over style considered as a set of technical procedures in the form of a philosophical tale, but also Abeille's practice of writing is at the opposite end of the spectrum. Explaining that, for him, writing is "being seized by a kind of state of alienation", which leads him to write "always at the edge of the pen", Abeille invokes the image of LP records to explain his approach: "I choose a groove and I follow it patiently, setting a tone for myself. That's how the elements emerge and come together. Afterwards, there is very little rewriting" and "I am not in control, but in the capture of a flow".
This
creative process
Creativity is a phenomenon whereby something new and valuable is formed. The created item may be intangible (such as an idea, a scientific theory, a musical composition, or a joke) or a physical object (such as an invention, a printed literary w ...
, which places the writer at the service of inspiration rather than seeing him as a demiurge creator, leads to the writing of texts sometimes much longer than expected (''Les Jardins statuaires'' was originally envisaged as a fable of about fifty pages), sometimes interrupted without the images appearing "secreting an interstitial tissue that draws them together into a narrative"; these images which "remain, being sufficient to themselves, in their disparate state" are named by Abeille his "more or less broken proses."
The refusal of committed literature and autofiction
Abeille explains his refusal of
committed literature
Committed literature (french: littérature engagée) can be defined as an approach of an author, poet, novelist, playwright or composer who commits their work to defend or assert an ethical, political, social, ideological or religious view, most of ...
: "as a writer, I don't want to have anything to do with power", noting that this literature "accommodates autocratic regimes very well". However, faithful to the postulates of surrealism, Abeille concedes that because literature feeds readers' imaginations, possesses a contesting value that acts according to a proper temporality that is not political, since "imagination is the first step in dissidence".
Any form of
autofiction
In literary criticism, autofiction is a form of fictionalized autobiography.
Autofiction combines two mutually inconsistent narrative forms, namely autobiography and fiction. An author may decide to recount their life in the third person, to mod ...
is also rejected by Abeille who, while recognizing that an author such as
Annie Ernaux
Annie Thérèse Blanche Ernaux (; born 1 September 1940) is a French writer, professor of literature and Nobel laureate. Her literary work, mostly autobiographical, maintains close links with sociology. Ernaux was awarded the 2022 Nobel Prize i ...
has remarkable writing, considers that "the self is a confinement." In the works of Abeille, on the contrary, the figure of the authorial self tends to disappear. This disappearance, thematized in his books whose narrators are without name or past (''Les Jardins statuaires'' and ''Les Barbares''), or wear an illusory identity (''Le Veilleur du jour'' and ''Les Voyages du fils''), is like that of their author. As Arnaud Laimé explains, he "refuses to think of himself as an individualized figure, recognized by all, who would be capable of producing texts over which he would exercise an authority" and instead strives to "efface himself to let the text come to life".
Literary influences and comparisons

Abeille describes various influences, the most prominent being that of
Gérard de Nerval
Gérard de Nerval (; 22 May 1808 – 26 January 1855) was the pen name of the French writer, poet, and translator Gérard Labrunie, a major figure of French romanticism, best known for his novellas and poems, especially the collection '' Les F ...
, to whom ''Le Veilleur du jour'' is dedicated and to whom he is described as "the most intimate friend".
Charles Duits
Charles Duits (1925–1991) was a French writer of the '' fantastique''.
Overview
Duits was a friend of André Breton and the surrealists. He wrote poetry and experimented with peyote. '' Thousand and One Nights'' and the Indian '' Ramayana'' ...
, another writer from Surrealism, with whom Abeille had a close relationship and whose conception of writing as dictation is reminiscent of that of Abeille, is also considered a "tutelary power" in the same way as Nerval.
In a non-exhaustive list of influences confessed by the author during various interviews, Daniel Launay also mentions the names of
George du Maurier
George Louis Palmella Busson du Maurier (6 March 1834 – 8 October 1896) was a Franco-British cartoonist and writer known for work in ''Punch'' and a Gothic novel ''Trilby'', featuring the character Svengali. His son was the actor Sir Gerald ...
,
Julien Gracq
Julien Gracq (; 27 July 1910 – 22 December 2007; born Louis Poirier in Saint-Florent-le-Vieil, in the French ''département'' of Maine-et-Loire) was a French writer. He wrote novels, critiques, a play, and poetry. His literary works were note ...
,
Jean Ray,
Wilhelm Jensen
Wilhelm Hermann Jensen (15 February 183724 November 1911) was a German writer and poet.
Biography
Wilhelm Jensen was born at Heiligenhafen in the Duchy of Holstein (now Germany), the illegitimate son of Swenn Hans Jensen (1795–1855), the Ma ...
,
Blaise Pascal
Blaise Pascal ( , , ; ; 19 June 1623 – 19 August 1662) was a French mathematician, physicist, inventor, philosopher, and Catholic writer.
He was a child prodigy who was educated by his father, a tax collector in Rouen. Pascal's earlies ...
, Alain-Pierre Pillet and
Gustav Meyrink
Gustav Meyrink (19 January 1868 – 4 December 1932) was the pseudonym of Gustav Meyer, an Austrian author,
novelist, dramatist, translator, and banker, most famous for his novel '' The Golem''.
He has been described as the "most respected Germa ...
. Certain figures gravitating in the surrealist orbit are also cited by Abeille as having contributed decisively to his entry into writing: "If I am a storyteller," he explains in a 2000 interview, "it is to
Gisèle Prassinos,
Leonora Carrington
Mary Leonora Carrington (6 April 191725 May 2011) was a British-born Mexican artist, surrealist painter, and novelist. She lived most of her adult life in Mexico City and was one of the last surviving participants in the surrealist movement o ...
,
Greta Knutson or
Nora Mitrani that I owe it".
As far as the Cycle des contrées is concerned, the most frequently mentioned comparisons are, for obvious thematic reasons, with Gracq and
Dino Buzzati, both of whom described the dull oppressive climate that the expectation of an increasingly probable and imminent barbarian invasion brings to bear on an imaginary country.
J. R. R. Tolkien
John Ronald Reuel Tolkien (, ; 3 January 1892 – 2 September 1973) was an English writer and philologist. He was the author of the high fantasy works ''The Hobbit'' and ''The Lord of the Rings''.
From 1925 to 1945, Tolkien was the Rawlins ...
is also mentioned, Abeille having been described by Pascal Maillard (coordinator of the Jean Arp Prize for French Literature) as "Tolkien who would have been able to write in the language of
Proust
Valentin Louis Georges Eugène Marcel Proust (; ; 10 July 1871 – 18 November 1922) was a French novelist, critic, and essayist who wrote the monumental novel '' In Search of Lost Time'' (''À la recherche du temps perdu''; with the previous En ...
, Breton or Gracq. "Anne Besson, for her part, has compared some of the procedures used by Abeille (practice of hyperonyms, fictional
mise en abyme
In Western art history, ''mise en abyme'' (; also ''mise en abîme'') is a formal technique of placing a copy of an image within itself, often in a way that suggests an infinitely recurring sequence. In film theory and literary theory, it refers ...
, etc.) to those used by
Antoine Volodine, and the ethno-anthropological concern that animates the narrators of the Cycle des Contrées to the anthropologist's approach to the secondary worlds of its creation by
Ursula K. LeGuin.
The erotic work and the "hyponym" Léo Barthe
An important part of Abeille's work consists of erotic and pornographic texts. Abeille explained that the objective of such texts, besides exploring the "dark continent" of femininity, consists in "making language do what it is not made for," bringing it closer to sensation, as language that usually designates not things themselves, but the ideas of things (as explained by
Ferdinand de Saussure
Ferdinand de Saussure (; ; 26 November 1857 – 22 February 1913) was a Swiss Linguistics, linguist, Semiotics, semiotician and philosopher. His ideas laid a foundation for many significant developments in both linguistics and semiotics in the 2 ...
's theory of the
arbitrariness
Arbitrariness is the quality of being "determined by chance, whim, or impulse, and not by necessity, reason, or principle". It is also used to refer to a choice made without any specific criterion or restraint.
Arbitrary decisions are not necess ...
of the sign). From this point of view, the "challenge" of pornographic literature, which consists in "bringing language back from the concept to sensation" is not fundamentally different from the function that the author assigns to poetry.
While some of these texts are published under the name of Jacques Abeille, others are published under the pseudonym Léo Barthe, which Abeille prefers to describe as a "
hyponym
In linguistics, semantics, general semantics, and ontologies, hyponymy () is a semantic relation between a hyponym denoting a subtype and a hypernym or hyperonym (sometimes called umbrella term or blanket term) denoting a supertype. In other w ...
". This name is also one of the characters in the Cycle des Contrées, an author of pornographic works who finds himself in possession of the testimonies collected by Molavoine, the policeman who watches Barthélémy Lécriveur, central character of the novel ''Le Veilleur du jour''. He then publishes them, accompanied by a text of his own composition, under the title of ''Chroniques scandaleuses de Terrèbre''. This collection of short stories, which was to play a role in the fiction as one of the elements in the trial of the nameless master of ''La Barbarie'', was published in 1995 under the name of the "hyponym" Léo Barthe, who thus belongs to both the
extradigetic and the intradigetic universe in the Cycle des Contrées.
Private life
Abeille was married and had three children.
Work
Most of Abeille's works have been published in a very scattered way, by several publishers or in sometimes confidential magazines and
fanzines
A fanzine (blend word, blend of ''fan (person), fan'' and ''magazine'' or ''-zine'') is a non-professional and non-official publication produced by fan (person), enthusiasts of a particular cultural phenomenon (such as a literary or musical genre) ...
. In addition to re-editions of collections, whose contents can vary, and the collective works on which Jacques Abeille collaborated, the latter signed several texts under pseudonym. The most constant and recurrent is that of Léo Barthe (in principle reserved for the publication of works of an erotic nature), but he also published under the pseudonym of Bartleby as well as under that of Christoph Aymerr (or Aymeric). The most complete bibliography to date, although not exhaustive according to its author, is that established by Arnaud Laimé and which appears in the work devoted to Jacques Abeille .
Le Cycle des contrées
* (1982)
* (1986)
* (1991)
* (2008)
* (2008)
* (2010)
* (2011)
* (2011)
* (2016)
* (2020)
References
{{DEFAULTSORT:Abeille, Jacques
French writers
French short story writers
French novelists
French poets
French painters
Writers from Lyon
1942 births
2022 deaths