BORIS VIAN
'Boris Vian' (March 10, 1920 – June 23, 1959) was a French writer, poet, singer, and musician, who also wrote under the pseudonym 'Vernon Sullivan'. He was born in Ville-d'Avray, near Paris, and educated at the Ăcole Centrale Paris. His works were often highly controversial, but his writing and performance of jazz songs gained the admiration of many famous names.
| Contents |
| Early life |
| Career |
| Vian and Jazz |
| The Jazz Conceptions of Boris Vian |
| Death |
| Selected bibliography |
| Prose |
| Dramatic works |
| Poetry |
| Translations |
| See also |
| External links |
Early life
Boris Vian was born in 1920 to an upper middle-class family in the wealthy Parisian suburb of Ville DâAvray. His early childhood was a privileged one, and even after his father lost most of his wealth in the crash of 1929, the family still managed to maintain a comfortable existence, renting out the main villa at the Ville dâAvray to the Menuhins of later musical fame while living in a small cottage on the property. His liberal upbringing included, among other indulgences, frequent surprise-parties (the English word was used at the time), unscripted social gatherings where âconvention gave way to invention, and the more wayward the invention the better.â Vian relished the novelty and absurdity of this childish pastime, and as an adult he continued to host surprise-parties from time to time. Before his teen years had expired, Vian was keeping a diary and had already written several works of fiction.
Career
Vian earned a degree as a civil engineer and began his career at the French Association for Standardisation where Vian held an undemanding post, and amused himself with pataphysical conundrums, by composing songs and sketching sub-aqueous plants, and by publishing a chapbook for friends that satirized his colleagues.
Vian wrote 10 novels, including popular hardboiled thrillers published under the name Vernon Sullivan, Vian's fictionalised American persona. The Sullivan ''Ćuvre'' earned Vian opprobrium and fame in equal measure, and he was fined 100,000 francs for the 100,000 copies sold of ''J'irai cracher sur vos tombes''. His books were frequently banned.
Under his own name Vian published ''L'Arrache-CĆur'' (''Heartsnatcher''), ''L'Herbe Rouge'', ''L'automne Ă PĂ©kin'' and what critics regard as his masterpiece, ''L'Ăcume des Jours''. ''L'Ăcume des Jours'' appears in three English translations, but Stanley Chapman's translation, called ''Froth on the Daydream'', is the most highly regarded. ''L'Ăcume des Jours'' was translated by an American in 1968 as ''Mood Indigo'' (named for the famous Duke Ellington song), and most recently by Brian Harper as ''Foam of the Daze''. Paul Knobloch has also translated "Autumn in Peking", which has received spectacular reviews, including one from American novelist James Sallis. It was published in 2004 by TamTam books. In addition, Paul Knobloch did the recent and first-ever English translation of "The Manual of Saint-Germain-des-PrĂ©s", published by Rizzoli International in concert with TamTam. He is currently at work on two other Vian/Sullivan novels: "Les morts on tous la mĂȘme peau", and "Et on tuera tous les affreux" (âThe dead all have the same skinâ and âTo hell with the uglyâ).
Vian was Raymond Chandler's French translator; he was intimately, if remotely, involved with American pop-culture and its reception in France.
He also authored plays, short stories and songs, including a 1958 collaboration on the opera ''Fiesta'' with Darius Milhaud. He often played jazz at the "Tabou", a club (now defunct) located in the Rue Dauphine, close to Saint-Germain des Prés, in Paris. He played a pocket trumpet, which he called "trompinette" in his poems. His most famous song was "Le déserteur", a pacifist song written during the Indochina War. His songs were recorded by a variety of other artists, including Juliette Gréco, Nana Mouskouri, Yves Montand, Magali Noel, and Henri Salvador. Serge Gainsbourg said that seeing Boris Vian on stage inspired him to try his hand at songwriting.
Vian and Jazz
A jazz enthusiast, he served as liaison for, among others, Duke Ellington and Miles Davis in Paris. He wrote for several French jazz-reviews (''Le Jazz Hot'', ''Paris Jazz'') and published numerous articles dealing with jazz both in America and France. Though he never put a foot on American soil, the themes of both jazz and America run thick in his work.
Vian's literary work was intimately tied to his love of jazz. In the foreword to ''L'Ăcume des Jours'', he writes, "There are only two things: love, all sorts of love, with pretty girls, and the music of New Orleans or Duke Ellington. Everything else ought to go, because everything else is ugly..." Vian expressed himself in music and in literature, as it were, in the same breath.
The Jazz Conceptions of Boris Vian
Over the course of his thirty-nine years, Boris Vian managed to live not just one but several existences. A prolific writer, Vian authored plays, poetry, novels, philosophical treatises, songs, magazine articles and reviews, and âtranslationsâ of non-existent American pulp novels. Trained as an engineer at the prestigious Ăcole Centrale in Paris, he was twice employed in this capacity, though by the end of his life he was more likely to lend his technical expertise to whimsical projects like the invention of an elastic wheel. At the same time, Vian played trumpet in Claude Abadieâs orchestra, one of the most successful amateur dance bands in postwar Paris, playing for American GIs and expatriates and French hipsters and existentialists in the smoky caves (underground nightclubs) of the Boulevard Saint-Germain. In addition, Vian was a family man, with children from each of his marriages. Remarkably, even as he honed his mastery in each of his livesââbe a specialist in everything,â he once said âVian constantly blurred the lines between them. He wrote a story about a mechanical cocktail-making piano (le pianocktail), literary-quality reviews of jazz concerts and of the latest technological innovations, and, in grand pataphysical style, an artistic and pseudo-mathematical examination of the nature of God.
Though jazz was only one of Boris Vianâs occupations, the sounds and ideas of the music deeply affected his artistry and his existence in general. Shortly after his death, one of his lifelong friends said: âhe was in love with jazz; he lived only for jazz; he heard jazz; he expressed himself in jazz.â Vian himself revealed the depth of his attachment to jazz through his numerous articles and reviews in French publications such as Jazz-Hot and Combat, and in his jazz-inflected fiction, which included stories with names like âBlues pour un chat noir.â As a prominent figure in the jazz and literary scenes of mid-century Paris, Boris Vianâs opinions, especially those on music, deeply affected the progression of the direction and the self-image of the Parisian jazz scene for years to come. This essay will sketch the genesis and the characteristics of the aesthetic of jazz that informed Vianâs influential perspective.
In 1938, Vianâs eyes were opened to the wonders of jazz; after seeing Duke Ellingtonâs big band at the Salle Pleyel, he resolved to learn jazz trumpet. Meanwhile, he earned his degree at the Ăcole Centrale and took a job at A.F.N.O.R. (lâassociation française de normalisation), a classic bureaucracy whose primary function was âto justify and prolong indefinitely its own existence, constantly putting off important decisions while inventing new pretexts for its survival.â After the toil of A.F.N.O.R., Vian transferred to the Office Professionel des Industries et des Commerces du Papier et du Carton, âwhereâaccording to his musician friend Claude LĂ©onââthere was literally nothing to f
★ cking do.ââ Vian finished two novels on the job in the year before he was fired.
Obviously, Vian did not see the life of an engineer as a particularly rewarding or engaging enterprise. He much preferred the vibrant scene of the left bank, centered along the boulevard Saint-Germain-des-PrĂ©s. There, surrounded by zazous (the young hipsters of the forties), impecunious writers, Sartrean existentialists, musicians, and hedonists, Vian found himself at the heart of a thriving bohemian subculture where he could simultaneously express many of his parallel identitiesâthe musician, the critic, the writer, the philosopher, and the jazz partisan. Vian himself never traveled to the United States to hear jazz in its native environment, relying instead on recordings and performances in Europe; consequently it was primarily in this environment that Vian nurtured and developed his sense of jazz.
Vianâs most direct involvement in the Saint-Germain scene was as the trumpeter for Claude Abadieâs six-piece dance band. In 1942, Boris and his brothers had enlisted en masse with the bandleader, with Alain on drums and LĂ©lio on guitar. Vian modeled his playing style after that of the trumpeter Bix Beiderbecke, whose recordings he cherished, while the Abadie band played in a complementary style, attempting to recreate the pure sounds of Dixieland and early swing. (Of course, the presence of guitar and string bass inherently detracted from the possibility of achieving an authentic approximation of the former, but so did the fact that their sound was emanating from Parisian basements and not from the back rooms of Storyville.) The Abadie orchestra was one of the more popular groups in France, taking top awards at several amateur jazz festivals and performing all over Europe. The self-avowed amateurism of the group certainly helped them in their musical mission; freed from the commercial constraints of the professional dance bands, the Abadie orchestra could afford to maintain their purity of style.
The liberation of Paris would end the âgolden eraâ of the artificially-isolated jazz scene wherein European musicians were the only available practitioners of the American art form. The GIs who invaded the musical time warp enabled by the war brought with them a demand for the newer forms of popular music, a demand which the Abadie orchestra managed to resist. âWe refused on moral grounds to play songs that we didnât like,â a bandmember recalled. âThe GIs would constantly request âBesame Muchoâ and other total saucissons of the era. Boris would reply, âNo, we wonât play âBesame Mucho;â weâre going to play some Duke Ellington for you.â In the end, everyone was happyâthe soldiers danced and we played âour music.ââ However, an influence that was not so easily tackled by the French jazz establishment was arrived in the GIsâ footsteps: le bebop. The endless debate over the new style resulted in the fragmentation of the community of jazz fans in France and provided endless fodder for the pens of French critics, including Boris Vian.
Though it did have a couple of stints at jazz festivals around Europe, the regular habitat of the Abadie orchestra was in the caves, the basement nightclubs full of jazz and existentialists (and presumably a fair number of poseurs). The experience of playing in this environment would deeply affect Vianâs conception of the juste milieu of jazz. The first of these clubs in open in Saint-Germain-des-PrĂ©s was the Tabou Club, and the Abadie orchestra was the house band. Later, Boris Vian would describe the entry into the club as follows: âone descended a torturous stone stairwayâŠending up in a long vaulted passage, like a subway station only much smaller and dirtier⊠It took some time to make all this out, since the cigarette smoke produced a fog of London-like proportions and the uproar was so intense that one reacted by not seeing anything.â As other clubs sprung up in imitation, the âamateurish, spontaneous airâ of the Tabou club gave way to a more subdued professionalism, and the Abadie band moved down the street to the Club Saint-Germain.
Though the caves may have initially presented an atmosphere of anarchy and abandon, they, along with their pre-war aboveground counterparts, also served as important rallying points for the organizers of the Parisian jazz scene.
In 1937, Vian had joined the Hot-Club de France, then headed by Hughes PanassiĂ© and Charles Delaunay, who together had introduced serious jazz scholarship to Europe. With this organization, he probably played a marginal role in bringing American big bands to Paris, including those of Benny Carter and Duke Ellington. Though the Hot-Club remained stable and operative throughout the war, the arrival of bebop would tear it apart. Essentially, after the disconnection of the war era was ended by the American liberation, the shock of sudden exposure to the new style was simply too much for some fans to integrate into their conception of the music. The question which proved so destructive (which to our eyes today is virtually incomprehensible) was âis bebop jazz?â In the Hot-Club, PanassiĂ© and Delaunay were split over the issue, with Delaunay siding with the beboppers, and PanassiĂ© claiming that the New Orleans style was in fact the only true form of the music. Thus was the querelle de bebop born. The Hot-Club split in 1947, with PanassiĂ© maintaining control of the organization and Delaunay taking over its magazine, Le Jazz-Hot.
It was in this ideologically-charged environment that Vian crafted his first attempts at jazz criticism. He sided firmly with Delaunay in defending the innovations of the young black American musicians, writing his first pieces exclusively for Jazz Hot. However, unlike the die-hards on both sides, he acknowledged the qualities of both styles, attempting to create a more tolerant path between the polemical extremes of the split. Meanwhile, he remarked upon the absurdity of the schism; a short story printed in the Christmas 1948 issue of Jazz Hot compared the querelle to the Nazi-Communist dichotomy. Goebbels shows up at Vianâs door with the salute âHeil Gillespie,â to which Vian replies âHeil Parker!â Goebbels, âdraining his glass of marijuana elixir,â then proceeds to instruct Vian in the intricacies of propaganda and cultural infiltration, consisting primarily of wordplay to fool the food service population: âUne poule au riz-bopâŠdu riz-bop au curry-bop, avec pain bis-bop et du thĂ©-lonious.â The humorous connection to the Nazis so soon after the atrocities of war is a rather uneasy one, but nothing is taboo for Vian, and he succeeds in driving the point home in his typically raw and cynical manner. Though many of his contributions to Jazz Hot would be less raucous, the pages of the magazine would serve him well as a bully pulpit for the propagation of his often-unconventional conceptions of jazz and the jazz scene.
To begin to understand what exactly these conceptions were, let us turn to Vianâs idea of what his own group sounded like. In Veronquin et le Plancton, one of the novels he finished while at the Professional Office of the Paper and Cardboard Industries, Claude Abadieâs orchestra makes its fictional dĂ©but: âthe musicians gave it their all, and managed to play pretty much as well as blacks of the thirty-seventh order.â This droll self-commentary indicates one of the fundamental attributes of Vianâs understanding of jazzâthe privileging of music created by black people. As this passage reflects, even the best efforts of white musicians are still orders of magnitude removed from the capabilities of their black counterparts. Vian would assign the same criticism to his own playingâno matter how hard he tried, he would never be able to equal the playing of a thirty-seventh-rate black musician. In fact, in his usual hyperbolic style, he actually went as far as to remove himself entirely from the realm of human endeavor. In his journal, he wrote âI played the trumpet a bit like a porker, I think.â Of course, many musicians have felt this same kind of existential despair while listening to the recordings or concerts of musicians whose superb skills seem totally unattainable, but for Vian, the one thing that practice couldnât changeâthe color of his skinâwas the major impediment to mastery of the jazz idiom.
In truth, Vian believed in the universality of this distinction. No matter what the jazz style, white musicians were inherently inferior to Blacks. âThe problem is the following,â he wrote in a 1948 editorial in Combat, âblack music is increasing encumbered by white elements, often pleasant but always superfluous, easily and advantageously replaced with black elements.â Vian believed, in theory, in the idea of racial mixing among musicians. âOf course, itâs fun to play with Blacks.â But, he asked his readers, âwho benefits? Surely not them!â âSo,â he ends the piece, âdo we have to exterminate the Whites? Of course not! But if only they could all just die suddenlyâŠâ Obviously, as a white musician himself, Vian is overstating his case. But for various reasons, Vian is continually frustrated by the Whites in jazz, especially when they take attention away from Blacks.
This frustration is not necessarily unreasonable. The history of jazz, and the history of American popular music in general, has been marked by a hep-cat/copycat phenomenon. The great innovators, usually black, have had their creations co-opted and commercialized by white artists for sale to the predominantly white populace. For reasons of racism and capitalism, the white bands are typically more successful than their black antecedents, even as their level of invention is sometimes far inferior. Of the commercially successful English pianist George Shearing, Vian wrote â[he] is nothing but a shitty platter of Huntzo-progressive style.â Benny Goodmanâs sextet, despite its integration, is similarly subject to Vianâs caustic criticism: âaside from Eldridge, what a constipated band!â It is hard to believe that Vianâs musical racism was simply a conscious and bitter reaction to the pressures of commercialism or an attempt at some kind of early musical affirmative action; it more probably was an actual reflection of how he perceived the music. Still, it seems likely that these perceptions, even with Vianâs emphatic claims of his receptiveness to all types of music, were colored by his deeply ingrained racial essentialism (which, in turn, may have been derived from an association of whiteness with commercialism.) While Stan Kentonâs attempts at âseriousâ composition are met with ridiculeââKenton never played jazz anyway, and I donât know why Iâm wasting my time with him in the columns of this supposedly-serious publicationââthose of Duke Ellington in his early Reminiscing in Tempo are cited as an example of a good attempt at âserious jazz,â despite the pieceâs initially-checkered critical reception. Vian thus betrays the fact that he shares some of PanassiĂ©âs inability to accept innovation and synthesis as part of the jazz aesthetic, especially if that innovation is coming from white composers.
If Vianâs jazz ideal is a progressive and professional music played by black musicians, then why does he choose the white trad-jazz legend Bix Beiderbecke as his idol? Although Beiderbecke is indeed a formidable presence in early jazz, a white musician whose playing style is as unique as that of any of his contemporaries, white or black, it seems odd that even after the arrival of bebop, Vian continues to consider him his idol. Miles Davis and Kenny Dorham are much more frequently cited in his columns, but Vian would never deign to model himself after them. The answer must lie in Vianâs conception of the abilities of white musicians in general, including himself. First of all, by following Beiderbeckeâs lead rather than a black trumpeterâs, he can excuse himself from the black-innovator/white-copier dynamic which he so vocally decries. The temporal separation of Beiderbeckeâs era also lends itself to an escape from this model, for it allows Vian to avoid the pretext of playing a popular and commercially viable music; instead, he can devote himself to an erudite attempt at recreating a music whose time is long past.
At first, this model seems inherently hypocritical; why does Vian play in public at all if he feels like white performance is inherently exploitative of the black tradition? And how can he justify calling the Ellington standards that he plays with the Abadie orchestra âour musicâ? In fact, though one might disagree with Vianâs stance, he manages to be logically consistent in his discrimination with the inclusion of his self-categorization as an amateur. With amateur status, he can disavow any commercial pretexts, and any material gains that result from his playing are merely accidental and not abusive. In addition, his amateurism excuses him from the responsibility of innovation to which he holds professionals. Thus, it is consistent for him to denounce an Artie Shaw record as ânot new enough to be sensational and not sensational enough to be newâ while continuing himself to recreate the music played by black musicians years or decades earlier. Since he believes, as he puts it, that âthe best that Whites can learn is to be good imitators,â he is trying his best to use the full extent of his racially-imposed limitations.
The music which Vian played in the Abadie orchestra and in his own groups was entirely derivative, even if played well. Solos tended less toward innovation and more toward a revival of the original style; Vian almost certainly committed some of Beiderbeckeâs recorded solos to memory to aid him in this quest. Though he believed himself incapable of true musical innovation, how did Vian view the role of spontaneity among true jazz musicians in general? One might expect that, in his bohemian liberalism, Vian would have favored a true and total freedom of form and color. In fact, weaned on big band and Dixieland charts, Vian never lost his love for the arranged side of jazz. âThe three great moments of my life had to be the concerts of Ellington in 1938, Dizzy in â48, and Ella in â52,â all of which shared a heavy reliance on the skills of the arranger as well as on those of the soloists. Strikingly, none of the hundreds of bebop combo concerts that Vian saw in Paris, including ones by Miles and âthe Zoizeauâ (Parker), made the list of âgreat moments.â
Vianâs fear of purely spontaneous and unarranged jazz was that it left too much to chance. âOne ends up relying on pure musical inspiration, and failing that, the music wonât lead to anything good, or it will alienate all but the most die-hard fans.â This comment discloses one of Vianâs primary concerns about bebopâthat it is not as accessible as earlier styles and therefore will not attract any new listeners. The simultaneous accessibility and refinement of Dizâs Latin-accented bebop big-band probably assuages some of these fears. But even without the ready-accessibility of the big-bands, Vian recognized Charlie Parkerâs mastery when he saw it at the 1949 Paris Jazz Festival:
: âAh! The genial superexcitation of the brain tissues of this manâŠwhat am I sayingâŠof this supermanâŠof this demi-god descended to earth⊠And why stop at demi-god?âŠof this godâŠof this double god! Have you seen how he plays? Indeed, in watching him we are far removed from the overintellectualized conceptions that our misdirected society and atrophied century have given to music.â
Next, Vian crafts a pseudomusicological analysis of the first dozen notes of Birdâs solo, dealing less with the music itself and more with Vianâs literary self-indulgence. âHave you noticed with inflexible necessity of the me to insert itself between the sol which precedes it and the sol which follows it?â Vian believes (and he is not alone) that a good solo has the same kind of artistic intent and finality about it as a through-composed arrangement, or for that matter a poem. However, thriving alongside the concrete and âinflexible necessityâ of the notesâ arrangement is an antithetical impulseâthe primal, savage, and anti-structural urges which lie deep below the foundations of our âatrophied century.â In listening to Birdâs solo, Vian hears the release of huge amounts of the same energy that he hears in other black musicâthe release of the human soul.
For Vian, this was the ultimate power of jazz, âthe potential for at least a partial escape from the strictures and inhibitions of the intellect.â The source of jazzâAmericaâwas the only potential source of such a mid-20th century anachronism. But this characterization of Parkerâs music, and of jazz in general, put us in a quandary. Boris Vian forswore the stereotype of the noble savage again and again as he elevated the âpopular music par excellenceâ of jazz to the level of high art, but in the end we find ourselves with that colonialist image staring us in the face. Is Vian just as racist as the rest? Does he think that Blacks should, because of their special talents, stick to artistic endeavors and forgo the opportunities of modern society?
The answers to these thorny questions could, in Vianâs words, âoccupy ninety-two block-printed double-spaced pages,â and we will not approach them here. But suffice it to say that, even in the most complimentary sense, the praise of black music for its primal urges may rest on even shakier ground than the jokes Vian makes about the Nazis even before the smoke from the camps has completely cleared. If Vian was not so insistent about the superiority of Blacks in the arena of lâexpression jazzistique, then his call for jazz to leave the sterile concert halls and return to the caves of the Boulevard Saint-Germain-des-PrĂ©s would not be as perplexing. Vian was definitely not a racist in an anti-Black, Jim Crow senseâDuke Ellington was the godfather of his daughter Carole. Perhaps his Afro-essentialism was a reaction to the Aryan essentialism of the Nazi occupiers. Or perhaps it was a reaction to what he perceived as the privileged, technically-structured nature of his own existence. Certainly, the influence of the French colonial endeavor accompanied by, in Paris, the new philosophy of nĂ©gritude, colored his conceptions of the capabilities and limits of the music.
Death
On the morning of June 23, 1959, Boris Vian was at the Cinema Marbeuf for the screening of the film version of his controversial "Vernon Sullivan" novel, ''J'irai cracher sur vos tombes'' (''I Shall Spit On Your Graves''). He had already fought with the producers over their interpretation of his work and he publicly denounced the film stating that he wished to have his name removed from the credits. A few minutes after the film began, he reportedly blurted out: "These guys are supposed to be American? My ass!" He then collapsed into his seat and died by sudden cardiac death en route to the hospital, an event probably foreshadowed by the fact that Boris Vian had been suffering from irregular heartbeat for a long time.
Selected bibliography
Prose
★ As Boris Vian:
★
★ ''Trouble dans les andains'' (1947, posthumously published in 1966)
★
★ ''Vercoquin et le plancton'' (1947)
★
★ ''L'Ăcume des jours'' (1947, ''Froth on the Daydream'', ''Mood Indigo'', ''Foam of the Daze''
★
★ ''L'automne Ă PĂ©kin'' (1947) "Autumn in Peking" (TamTam Books,2005)
★
★ ''Les Fourmis'' (1949, short stories)
★
★ ''L'Herbe rouge'' (1950)
★
★ ''L'Arrache-coeur'' (1953, ''Heartsnatcher'')
★
★ ''Le loup-garou'' (posthumously published in 1970, short stories)
★ As Vernon Sullivan:
★
★ ''J'irai cracher sur vos tombes'' (1946, ''I Shall Spit on Your Graves'' (TamTam Books))
★
★ ''Les morts ont tous la mĂȘme peau'' (1947)
★
★ ''Et on tuera tous les affreux'' (1948)
★
★ ''Elles se rendent pas compte'' (1949)
Dramatic works
★ ''L'Ăquarrissage pour tous'' (1950)
★ ''Le Dernier des mĂ©tiers'' (1950)
★ ''TĂȘte de MĂ©duse'' (1951)
★ ''Les BĂątisseurs d'Empire'' (1959)
★ ''Le GoĂ»ter des gĂ©nĂ©raux'' (posthumously published in 1962)
Poetry
★ ''Barnum's Digest'' (1948, a collection of 10 poems)
★ ''CantilĂšnes en gelĂ©e'' (1949)
★ ''Je voudrais pas crever'' (posthumously published in 1962)
Translations
★ ''The Big Sleep'' by Raymond Chandler as ''Le grand sommeil'' (1948)
★ ''The Lady in the Lake'' by Raymond Chandler as ''La dame du lac'' (1948)
★ ''The World of Null-A'' by A. E. van Vogt, as ''Le Monde des Ă '' (1958)
etc.
The difficulty of translating Vian might account for his relative obscurity in the English-speaking world. ''L'Ă©cume'' in English means foam, froth or spume, but the expression ''l'Ă©cume des jours'' is a bizarre and unnatural concoction, typical of Vian's light and surrealistic touch. Critics comment that in ''L'Ăcume des Jours'' -- which Raymond Queneau called 'the most heartbreakingly poignant modern love story ever written' -- Vian's imaginative and playful use of language constitutes a fourth dimension of meaning, which supplements ordinary elements of plot and character. The difficulty of re-capturing the distinctively Vian-esque tone and charm of the text is the challenge confronting his translators. Vian's novels are tied irrevocably to the language of their composition.
It should be noted, however, that despite the difficulties almost all of his works have been translated to Hungarian, German, Polish and Russian, a lot of them to Italian (the list of the translated works can be found on the Boris Vian Wikipedia pages of the given language).
See also
★ Zazou
★ Existentialism
External links
★ Biography in English on the Radio France International Website
★ Le Petit Cahier du Grand Boris Vian: Biography, Quotations, Articles, etcFrench
★ Boris Vian for English language readers
★ Vian page on Tam Tam Books site
★ A Tribute to Gainsbourg, zoom sur Boris VianFrench
★ Le DĂ©serteur translated in a lot of different languages
★ Boris Vian in St Tropez 1950
★
★ Boris Vian, J'irai chanter sur vos tombes site-confĂ©rence du Hall de la Chanson, French
★ Some Thoughts on the Work of Boris Vian – ''feature article on ReadySteadyBook
★ intermezzzo - boris vian in croatian language
★ Photo
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