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"Guy Debord, National Treasure" (Part 2)
Patrons Lacking for Debord's ManuscriptsLe Monde, 17 June 2009
http://www.notbored.org/BNFa.html
Bruno Racine, the president of the Bibliotheque Nationale de France
(BNF) hosted 200 potential patrons on Monday, 15 June, at a dinner
gala in the Hall of Globes. The dinner guests were encouraged to give
as much money as possible to help the BNF acquire the archives of Guy
Debord, the leader of situationism. According to Mr. Racine, these
archives constitute "a unique collection for the literary
avant-gardes."
But the patrons didn't jostle for position to make their donations.
Nearly 180,000 euros [$234,000] were raised, less than one-tenth of
the sum that France must pay in the next two and a half years.[1] "Its
a good start," estimates Mr. Racine, who looks forward to a more
favorable situation in 2010. The Minister of Culture, Christine
Albanel (who was present at the dinner), can tap into the French kitty
through the Funds for the National Heritage. But American
universities, Yale, in particular, are waiting in ambush....
To tempt the dinner guests, three spiral-bound notebooks -- two on
small-squared graph paper, one on large-squared paper, each with
rose-colored strokes marking the margins -- were exhibited during the
dinner. Classified a "national treasure," they form the [handwritten]
manuscript of Guy Debord's The Society of the Spectacle. The text is
full of annotations in blue and black ink that follow the meticulously
enumerated paragraphs, which indicate the pages of the book to
come.[2]
Among the dinner guests was Philippe Sollers, who won the BNF's first
prize, worth 10,000 euros and matched by a research fellowship of
10,000 euros that will be awarded to a student who will write a work
about his oeuvre. Sollers took the occasion to render homage to Guy
Debord, an "exceptional reader."
(Written by Alain Beuve-Mery and published in the 17 June 2009 issue
of Le Monde. Translated from the French by NOT BORED! 17 June 2009.)
[1] Translator's note: this means that Yale University offered Alice
Debord, Guy's widow, at least $2,340,000 for his archives.
[2] Translator's note: it seems the author has confused the
manuscript's numbered theses (221 in total) with its pages.
----------------------
Guy Debord FundraiserLiberation, 17 June 2009
http://www.notbored.org/BNFb.html
Guy Debord's The Society of the Spectacle under glass. Three spiral
notebooks, exhibited not far from Boris Vian's L'Ecume des jours andThe Life of Saint Catherine, an Illuminated Manuscript (from the 15th
century). In the Hall of Globes of the Bibliotheque Nationale de
France (BNF), more than two hundred people milled around, glasses of
Roederer champagne in hand. This past Monday evening, they came to a
dinner intended to finance the acquisition of Guy Debord's
archives.[1] France has refused to see them leave the country and has
classified them as a national treasure (see Liberation, 16 February).
Debord... a treasure. His widow[2] has jealously guarded the
integrity of these assets [du fonds] since his suicide in 1994. The
founder of situationism, meticulous in his attention to his posthumous
destiny, took care to sort through and organize the totality of his
manuscripts, notes and letters before his death. For the last two
years, Yale, the American university, has coveted them for its
research center on the avant-garde. Debord booed the State. The State
embalms him. "This evening depends upon the spectacular society,"
Jean-Claude Meyer, the president of the BNF Society, admitted in his
speech. "Its ironic and, at the same time, a great homage."
Tartar sauce. Eighteen tables (baptized "Baudelaire,"
"Toulouse-Lautrec," "Debussy," "Chateaubriand"...) are spread
throughout the entire hall. Each table costs 6,000 euros; 500 per
plate. It is the second dinner that Bruno Racine, the president of the
BNF, has -- along with the library's Society -- organized in the
American patronage tradition. The preceding dinner gala in 2008
allowed the BNF to purchase a unique piece by the artist Anselm
Kiefer. The State has 30 months from the announcement published on 29
January [2009] in the Official Journal to raise the sum proposed[3] by
Yale.
Before the beginning of the meal -- wild sea bass and scallop tartar,
a crisp vegetable and herb salad, oven-roasted veal fillet, sauteed
chanterelles and asparagus in a thyme-lemon dressing, voluptuous wild
strawberries, barley water, rhubarb compote, all washed down with,
among other wines, Chateau Dassault 2001 -- Bruno Racine returned to
his theme: his "priority is to acquire Guy Debord's archives." "If a
certificate of conformism is necessary to gain entrance into the BNF's
collections, then his radiance would be diminished." Sade was also
recuperated to create the basis of the restricted section of the
BNF.[4] Then why not Debord, yielded up in a bloc for the purposes of
research?
Hedonism. The first winner of the BNF prize, dedicated to a living,
French-speaking author, for the totality of his work, is announced: it
is Philippe Sollers. The irony of the moment[5] doesn't escape the
author of A Real Novel,[6] who speaks of a "historical short-circuit."
He speaks. About reading ("to be on the secret transmission line of
reading"), about libraries ("of souls"), about hedonism ("To know how
to read, one must know how to live"),[7] about pleasure (he left the
studious halls of the rue de Richelieu, "not to burn cars, but to do
things that weren't quite seen at the time, and that still aren't"),
and about Lautremont ("who still reads poetry?" he seemed to say).
The exegete of the situationist recalled him: "I have great admiration
for Debord, even if he critiqued me." When will there be a Philippe
Sollers archive? "Negotiations have started," he says, leaving the
terrace that opens upon the BNF's gardens. It is midnight. Between the
tables and the [additional] gifts, the dinner will have raised around
200,000 euros. Alice Debord, true to her principles, didn't speak. All
she would say is, "It wouldn't come."
(Written by Frederique Roussel and published in the 17 June 2009 issue
of Liberation. Translated from the French by NOT BORED! 17 June 2009.
All footnotes by the translator.)
[1] From Alice Becker-Ho, also known as Alice Debord.
[2] Alice Becker-Ho.
[3] To Alice Becker-Ho.
[4] Sade aussi a ete recupere pour paver l'Enfer de la BNF.
[5] Guy Debord detested Philippe Sollers, refused to meet him in
person, and denounced him by name in "Cette Mauvaise Reputation"
(published in 1993).
[6] Philippe Sollers himself.
[7] A remark plagiarized from Guy Debord.
Patrons Lacking for Debord's ManuscriptsLe Monde, 17 June 2009 http://www.notbored.org/BNFa.html
Bruno Racine, the president of the Bibliotheque Nationale de France (BNF) hosted 200 potential patrons on Monday, 15 June, at a dinner gala in the Hall of Globes. The dinner guests were encouraged to give as much money as possible to help the BNF acquire the archives of Guy Debord, the leader of situationism. According to Mr. Racine, these archives constitute "a unique collection for the literary avant-gardes."
But the patrons didn't jostle for position to make their donations. Nearly 180,000 euros [$234,000] were raised, less than one-tenth of the sum that France must pay in the next two and a half years.[1] "Its a good start," estimates Mr. Racine, who looks forward to a more favorable situation in 2010. The Minister of Culture, Christine Albanel (who was present at the dinner), can tap into the French kitty through the Funds for the National Heritage. But American universities, Yale, in particular, are waiting in ambush....
To tempt the dinner guests, three spiral-bound notebooks -- two on small-squared graph paper, one on large-squared paper, each with rose-colored strokes marking the margins -- were exhibited during the dinner. Classified a "national treasure," they form the [handwritten] manuscript of Guy Debord's The Society of the Spectacle. The text is full of annotations in blue and black ink that follow the meticulously enumerated paragraphs, which indicate the pages of the book to come.[2]
Among the dinner guests was Philippe Sollers, who won the BNF's first prize, worth 10,000 euros and matched by a research fellowship of 10,000 euros that will be awarded to a student who will write a work about his oeuvre. Sollers took the occasion to render homage to Guy Debord, an "exceptional reader."
(Written by Alain Beuve-Mery and published in the 17 June 2009 issue of Le Monde. Translated from the French by NOT BORED! 17 June 2009.)
[1] Translator's note: this means that Yale University offered Alice Debord, Guy's widow, at least $2,340,000 for his archives.
[2] Translator's note: it seems the author has confused the manuscript's numbered theses (221 in total) with its pages.
----------------------
Guy Debord FundraiserLiberation, 17 June 2009 http://www.notbored.org/BNFb.html
Guy Debord's The Society of the Spectacle under glass. Three spiral notebooks, exhibited not far from Boris Vian's L'Ecume des jours andThe Life of Saint Catherine, an Illuminated Manuscript (from the 15th century). In the Hall of Globes of the Bibliotheque Nationale de France (BNF), more than two hundred people milled around, glasses of Roederer champagne in hand. This past Monday evening, they came to a dinner intended to finance the acquisition of Guy Debord's archives.[1] France has refused to see them leave the country and has classified them as a national treasure (see Liberation, 16 February).
Debord... a treasure. His widow[2] has jealously guarded the integrity of these assets [du fonds] since his suicide in 1994. The founder of situationism, meticulous in his attention to his posthumous destiny, took care to sort through and organize the totality of his manuscripts, notes and letters before his death. For the last two years, Yale, the American university, has coveted them for its research center on the avant-garde. Debord booed the State. The State embalms him. "This evening depends upon the spectacular society," Jean-Claude Meyer, the president of the BNF Society, admitted in his speech. "Its ironic and, at the same time, a great homage."
Tartar sauce. Eighteen tables (baptized "Baudelaire," "Toulouse-Lautrec," "Debussy," "Chateaubriand"...) are spread throughout the entire hall. Each table costs 6,000 euros; 500 per plate. It is the second dinner that Bruno Racine, the president of the BNF, has -- along with the library's Society -- organized in the American patronage tradition. The preceding dinner gala in 2008 allowed the BNF to purchase a unique piece by the artist Anselm Kiefer. The State has 30 months from the announcement published on 29 January [2009] in the Official Journal to raise the sum proposed[3] by Yale.
Before the beginning of the meal -- wild sea bass and scallop tartar, a crisp vegetable and herb salad, oven-roasted veal fillet, sauteed chanterelles and asparagus in a thyme-lemon dressing, voluptuous wild strawberries, barley water, rhubarb compote, all washed down with, among other wines, Chateau Dassault 2001 -- Bruno Racine returned to his theme: his "priority is to acquire Guy Debord's archives." "If a certificate of conformism is necessary to gain entrance into the BNF's collections, then his radiance would be diminished." Sade was also recuperated to create the basis of the restricted section of the BNF.[4] Then why not Debord, yielded up in a bloc for the purposes of research?
Hedonism. The first winner of the BNF prize, dedicated to a living, French-speaking author, for the totality of his work, is announced: it is Philippe Sollers. The irony of the moment[5] doesn't escape the author of A Real Novel,[6] who speaks of a "historical short-circuit." He speaks. About reading ("to be on the secret transmission line of reading"), about libraries ("of souls"), about hedonism ("To know how to read, one must know how to live"),[7] about pleasure (he left the studious halls of the rue de Richelieu, "not to burn cars, but to do things that weren't quite seen at the time, and that still aren't"), and about Lautremont ("who still reads poetry?" he seemed to say).
The exegete of the situationist recalled him: "I have great admiration for Debord, even if he critiqued me." When will there be a Philippe Sollers archive? "Negotiations have started," he says, leaving the terrace that opens upon the BNF's gardens. It is midnight. Between the tables and the [additional] gifts, the dinner will have raised around 200,000 euros. Alice Debord, true to her principles, didn't speak. All she would say is, "It wouldn't come."
(Written by Frederique Roussel and published in the 17 June 2009 issue of Liberation. Translated from the French by NOT BORED! 17 June 2009. All footnotes by the translator.)
[1] From Alice Becker-Ho, also known as Alice Debord.
[2] Alice Becker-Ho.
[3] To Alice Becker-Ho.
[4] Sade aussi a ete recupere pour paver l'Enfer de la BNF.
[5] Guy Debord detested Philippe Sollers, refused to meet him in person, and denounced him by name in "Cette Mauvaise Reputation" (published in 1993).
[6] Philippe Sollers himself.
[7] A remark plagiarized from Guy Debord.