Guillevic as Ecopoet: Apples, Roundness, and Affinities with Thoreau

Author(s)

  • Aaron Prevots Southwestern University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.51777/relief12342

Keywords:

canonicity, ecopoetry, intersubjectivity, wildness, Eugène Guillevic, Henry David Thoreau

Abstract

This article will explore ecopoetics by comparing notes on tonic wildness: Eugène Guillevic’s poetry collection Sphère (1963), particularly the poem “Rond”, and Henry David Thoreau’s late essay “Wild Apples” (1859-1862). It will show how both writers foreground ethics and ecology via the materiality of words, the pull of nature, and the nuances of narrative voice. I will emphasize ways in which renowned French poet Guillevic exemplifies ecopoetics, despite critics not applying this label to him. I will develop parallels between Guillevic and Thoreau, consider Guillevic’s love for the non-human, and discuss the environmental and ecological stakes of his sensuous communion with the outer world. I will analyze these writers’ lively, invigorating poetic stances, highlighting the creative responses that Guillevic invites to the natural world and intersubjectivity, habitat and humanity, the senses and ecological paths that provide a future orientation. Kin perhaps to essayist Michael Pollan, Guillevic inscribes us in the cosmos and immerses us in cyclical growth, including by celebrating apples’ implicit call to inscription in the biosphere. His meditative, dialogic voice and affinities with Thoreau help ecopoetics as a category embrace immediacy and self-awareness as well as historical and literary trends since antiquity.

Author Biography

  • Aaron Prevots, Southwestern University

    Aaron Prevots is Professor of French at Southwestern University (USA). His research emphasizes modern and contemporary French poetry. He is the author of articles on numerous French poets and of the monographs Esther Tellermann: Énigme, prière, identité (Brill, 2022), Bernard Vargaftig: Gestures toward the Sacred (Peter Lang, 2019), and Jacques Réda: Being There, Almost (Brill Rodopi, 2016). He has also published translations: Silences (VVV, 2019) and As Breathing (VVV, 2010), by Vargaftig; At the Water’s Edge (VVV, 2017), selected poems by Jean-Claude Pinson; and, by Réda, Europes (Host, 2009), Thirteen Songs of Dark Love (VVV, 2008) and Return to Calm (Host, 2007).

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Published

2022-07-08

How to Cite

“Guillevic as Ecopoet: Apples, Roundness, and Affinities with Thoreau ” (2022) RELIEF - REVUE ÉLECTRONIQUE DE LITTÉRATURE FRANÇAISE, 16(1), pp. 57–69. doi:10.51777/relief12342.