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Pierre Menard, Author of the Quixote" (original Spanish title: "Pierre Menard, autor del Quijote") is a short story

by Argentine writer Jorge Luis Borges. It originally appeared in Spanish in the Argentine journal Sur in May 1939. The Spanishlanguage original was first published in book form in Borges's 1941 collection El Jardn de senderos que se bifurcan (The Garden of Forking Paths) which was, in turn, included in his much-reprinted Ficciones (1944).

Contents
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1 Plot summary 2 Analysis 3 Publishing history 4 Possible sources of the name 5 Influence 6 Notes 7 See also 8 External links

[edit] Plot summary


"Pierre Menard, Author of the Quixote" is written in the form of a review or literary critical piece about (the non-existent) Pierre Menard, a 20th century French writer. It begins with a brief introduction and a listing of all of Menard's work. Borges' "review" describes Menard's efforts to go beyond a mere "translation" of Don Quixote by immersing himself so thoroughly in the work as to be able to actually "re-create" it, line for line, in the original 17th century Spanish. Thus, Pierre Menard is often used to raise questions and discussion about the nature of authorship, appropriation and interpretation.

[edit] Analysis
"Pierre Menard, Author of the Quixote" is indeed literary criticism but through the medium of fantasy, irony, and humor. His narrator/reviewer considers Menard's fragmentary Quixote (which is line-for-line identical to the original) to be much richer in allusion than Cervantes's "original" work because Menard's must be considered in light of world events since 1602. Cervantes, the reviewer claims, "indulges in a rather coarse opposition between tales of knighthood and the meager, provincial reality of his country". While Menard writes of the distant past ("the land of Carmen during the century of Lepanto and Lope), in Cervantes there are neither bands of Gypsies, conquistadors... nor autos de f". In this, Borges anticipates the post-modern theory that gives centrality to reader response; his name appeared in Jaques Derrida's question and answer

section that followed his delivery of his 1966 essay "Signature, Event, Context: A communication to the Congrs International des Socits de Philosophie de Langue Franaise."[citation needed] In "The Library of Babel", Borges contemplates the opposite effect: impoverishment of a text through the means of its reproduction. In a pattern analogous to the infinite monkey theorem, all texts are reproduced in a vast library only because complete randomness eventually reproduces all possible combinations of letters. Both stories deal with difficulty of creating meaning or perhaps finding or determining meaning. In the case of Quixote the meaning depends on reader-response and/or context of the work. In the case of The Library of Babel meaning is hard to find as any coherent works are rare. By implication the library contains all possible works. However any work with meaning is random and not the product of human action and therefore drained of meaning. In the case of Quixote the human action of writing and reading the work affect meaning. Borges wrote the story while recovering from a head injury. If it is to be counted as a work of fiction, then it was the first such published under his own name. (The 1933 "Hombre de la esquina rosada" was published under the pseudonym H. Bustos). As so often in his writings, the story abounds in clever references and subtle jokes. His narrator/reviewer is an arch-Catholic who remarks of the readers of a rival journal that they are "few and Calvinist, if not Masonic and circumcised". According to Emir Rodrguez Monegal and Alastair Reid, Menard is in part "a caricature of Stphane Mallarm and Paul Valry or Miguel de Unamuno and Enrique Larreta".[1]

[edit] Publishing history


Two English-language translations were published more or less simultaneously in 1962: one by James E. Irby in a diverse collection of Borges works entitled Labyrinths; the other by Anthony Bonner as part of a collaborative translation of the entirety of Ficciones (1962). The Bonner translation is reprinted in Borges, A Reader.[2]

[edit] Possible sources of the name


Pierre Menard, the first Lieutenant Governor of Illinois. Pierre Mnard, a minor 18th-century French writer. Colombian poet Juan Gustavo Cobo Borda has argued that there existed a minor symbolist poet by this name whose story Borges embroidered rather than created out of whole cloth: "I read the biography of Rodrguez Monegal and Menard actually existed as a minor symbolist poet who had written a book, a thesis on time, and Borges had found that book. Then people went to look for Pierre Menard and they found a Pierre Menard, but a doubled Pierre Menard, the one that Borges had invented."[3]

[edit] Influence
In his foreword to P. G. Wodehouse's Sunset at Blandings, Douglas Adams recommended the story: "You should read Jorge Luis Borgess short story Pierre Menard, Author of the Quixote.

Its only six pages long, and youll be wanting to drop me a postcard to thank me for pointing it out to you." The foreword was reprinted in Adams's posthumously-published collection of writings, The Salmon of Doubt. In Italo Calvino's If on a Winter's Night a Traveler (1979) the character Silas Flannery tries to copy a "famous novel" to gain the energy from that text for his own writing, and finally he feels tempted to copy the entire novel Crime and Punishment. This technique was actually attempted by Hunter S. Thompson, who retyped the entirety of The Great Gatsby when he studied at Columbia University, prior to the writing of any of his major works. John Hodgman claims to have made a "controversial shot-by-shot remake" of "Pierre Menard" in the "page-a-day calendar" portion of his book More Information Than You Require, on the date December 4, 1998. The joke references not only the recreation nature of the original short story, but also Gus Van Sant's shot-for-shot remake of Psycho, which was released on December 4, 1998. The story is also referenced in the introduction to Roberto Bolao's novel Distant Star, and along with "An Examination of the Work of Herbert Quain" has a noticeable influence on his other works, particularly Nazi Literature in the Americas.

[edit] Notes
1. ^ Monegal, Emir R., Alastair Reid (ed). (1981) Borges, A Reader. New York: E. P. Dutton, 346. ISBN 0-525-47654-7 2. ^ Monegal and Reid (ed.), page reference req'd 3. ^ Borda, Juan Gustavo Cobo (1999). Borges enamorado. Ensayos crticos. Dilogos con Borges. Rescate y glosa de textos de Borges y sobre Borges. Bogot: Instituto Caro y Cuervo. [1] Accessed 2 February 2009.

[edit] See also

Tln, Uqbar, Orbis Tertius

[edit] External links


"Pierre Menard, autor del Quixote" Complete Spanish text Commentary on "Pierre Menard, Author of the Quixote" by Beatriz Sarlo "Pierre Menard, Author of the Quixote" English translation by James E. Irby "Pierre Menard, Author of the Principia'" A re-write by Basileios Drolias from a scientific viewpoint "Atrapados en la galera de los espejos: Hacia una potica de la lectura en Pierre Menard de Jorge Luis Borges" by Santiago Juan-Navarro.

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