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{{short description|1973 novel by Philippe Sollers}}
{{Infobox book | <!-- See [[Wikipedia:WikiProject Novels]] or [[Wikipedia:WikiProject Books]] -->
| name = H
| title_orig = H
| translator = Veronika Stankovianska, David Vichnar
| image = File:Philippe_sollers_H_cover.jpg
| caption =
| author = [[Philippe Sollers]]
| illustrator =
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}}
'''''H''''' ({{lang-fr|H}}) is a 1973 novel by [[French language|French]] novelist [[Philippe Sollers]]. The novel was distinguished by its lack of punctuation, similar to Sollers's novels ''Lois'' and ''[[Paradis (novel)|Paradis]]''.{{sfn|Pollard|1994|page=102}} The book was published in English translation in 2015.{{sfn|Sollers|2015}} Critic Roland Champagne describes ''H'' as the "culmination" of the "breakdown in traditional writing for Sollers," a period that began with Sollers's novel ''Lois''.{{sfn|Champagne|1996|page=46}}
==Overview==
Sollers opens ''H'' with a reference to [[Deleuze and Guattari]]'s ''[[Anti-Oedipus]]''. This reference, Roland Champagne argues, reflects a kinship between the ''Anti-Oedipus'' authors' view of the self as a "desiring machine" and Sollers's desire to parody the "texts which create the self and thereby produce mirror-images of the self as it is reflected in the languages of culture."{{sfn|Champagne|1996|page=49}}
<blockquote>In the latest of his books, the unpunctuated but intensely and dramatically rhythmical ''H'', Sollers registers a personal awareness of the ''Wake'', discovering in Joyce a true subversion of language and a profound historical vision. ''H'' also focuses on Ezra Pound's accomplishment, the epic thrust through time and across space. It is the first of Sollers' books to have frequent glimmers of humor ... and the first to come to its public, as did the ''Wake'', without an explicit "key," a preliminary road map. The reader must chart his own ''H'' space and time, carve out chunks of ''H'' meaning, and supply punctuation and emphases.{{sfn|Hayman|1978}}</blockquote>▼
''H'' is characterized by Sollers's preoccupation with Joyce's ''[[Finnegans Wake]]'', a book that provides Sollers an example of "a true subversion of language and a profound historical vision."{{sfn|Hayman|1978|pages=122–141}} ''H'' also reveals Sollers's interest in [[Ezra Pound]]'s work, "the epic thrust through time and across space."{{sfn|Hayman|1978|pages=122–141}}
Sollers had written in ''[[Tel Quel]]'' that he needed a "rhythm that reflects the tangle of social relationships." Roland Champagne, in his book on Sollers, writes "for this, he need[ed] a new form that will allow the spoken word to provide such a complex voicing, without the hindrances of formal written structure with its paragraphs, capitalization, and punctuation.{{sfn|Champagne|1996|page=47}}
<blockquote>It should be noted that ''H'' is an integrated system of nodal divagations on various sociohistorical and personal-psychological as well as literary-aesthetic themes. Joyce's book is also nodal (focusing by means of discrete allusions), but it is above all a polysemous supermyth of human paradigms. Only in the most abstract sense is it political. While the ''Wake'' has strong, if hidden, elements of plot and character, and a coherent and systematic development, there is no plot line in ''H'' or ''Paradis''. If there are personalities, there are no personae. Instead we have the overarching person (''sujet'') of the writer imposing itself discreetly through its rhythms upon a vision of history as process, or rather of historical flux.{{sfn|Hayman|1978}}</blockquote>▼
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==Reception==
French literary critic [[Roland Barthes]] grouped ''H'' with three other books by Sollers, ''Drame'', ''[[Paradis (novel)|Paradis]]'', and ''Lois'', and described these four as books that
<blockquote>have to be referred to as novels because there is no other term to designate them. But they do not tell stories, describe a particular society or present identifiable characters. They are texts of which language itself is the subject, language which is wholly free from the duty to describe. The world which these texts presents is not one which the reader could either identify as her own or see clearly as different from it. In the past, in Barthes's view it was the author's duty to describe such a world which held language unjustifiably captive. One of the reasons he writes with such enthusiasm about Sollers is the way in which texts such as ''Paradis'' and ''Lois'' show what happens when this duty is removed.{{sfn|Barthes|1987|page=7}}</blockquote>
Philip Barnard and Cheryl Lester also viewed ''H'' as a turning point in Sollers's work, while also acknowledging its clear antecedents in the work of authors like Joyce and Faulkner:
<blockquote>Without yet returning to plot and character, the novels ''H'' (1973) and ''Paradis'' (1981) transform the discrete segments and pronounced architecture of the earlier works into a continuous, unpunctuated flow of rhythmic prose. With these two novels, Sollers achieved a ''tour de force'' of modernist poetics whose clear precedents are Joyce and Faulkner. The powerful narrative voice that emerges in these works foregrounds song, chant, psalmody, and real rhythms that point toward their sources in sacred texts and Dantean ''epos''.{{sfn|Barnard|1988}}</blockquote>▼
▲<blockquote>Without yet returning to plot and character, the novels ''H'' (1973) and ''Paradis'' (1981) transform the discrete segments and pronounced architecture of the earlier works into a continuous, unpunctuated flow of rhythmic prose. With these two novels, Sollers achieved a ''tour de force'' of modernist poetics whose clear precedents are Joyce and Faulkner. The powerful narrative voice that emerges in these works foregrounds song, chant, psalmody, and real rhythms that point toward their sources in sacred texts and Dantean ''epos''.{{sfn|Barnard|Lester|1988|pages=163–166}}</blockquote>
''Driftless Area Review'' lauded ''H'', stating "[a]long with ''[[Ulysses (novel)|Ulysses]]'' and [[Samuel Beckett|Beckett]]’s ''Three Novels'', ''H'' can take its place in the permanent avant-garde."{{sfn|Driftless|1996}}
==References==
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==Sources==
{{refbegin}}
* {{cite journal|last1=Barnard|first1=Philip|last2=Lester|first2=Cheryl|title=Philippe Sollers: <em>Femmes</em>|journal=Yale French Studies|date=1988|
* {{cite book|last1=Barthes|first1=Roland|title=Writer Sollers|date=1987|publisher=University of Minnesota Press|location=Minneapolis|isbn=0-8166-1627-2
* {{cite book|last1=Champagne|first1=Roland|title=Philippe Sollers|date=1996|publisher=Rodopi|location=Atlanta|isbn=978-9042000049}}
* {{cite web |title=Translation Tuesdays: H, by Philippe Sollers |url=https://driftlessareareview.com/2015/11/17/translation-tuesdays-h-by-philippe-sollers/ |website=Driftless Area Review |accessdate=1 April 2019 |date=17 November 2015|ref = {{harvid|Driftless|1996}}}}
* {{cite journal|last1=Hayman|first1=David|title=An Interview with Philippe Sollers|journal=Iowa Review|date=1974|volume=5.4 (Winter)|issue=4|pages=91–101|doi=10.17077/0021-065X.1773|doi-access=free}}
* {{cite book
* {{cite book |last1=
* {{cite book |last1=Sollers |first1=Philippe |title=H |date=2015 |publisher=Equus Press |location=London |isbn=978-0993195501}}
{{refend}}
[[Category:Novels by Philippe Sollers]]
[[Category:1973 French novels]]
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