

PIERRE BAYARD & UMBERTO ECO
with Paul Holdengraber: How to Talk About Books You Haven't Read (17/11/ 2007)
http://fora.tv/2007/11/17/Bayard_and_Eco_How_to_Talk_About_Books_You_Havent_Read
http://www.nypl.org/research/chss/pep/pepdesc.cfm?id=3641
Umberto Eco insists that he read Pierre Bayard's book, How to Talk About Books You Haven't Read or at least skimmed it. In the July 26th edition of L'Espresso
Eco writes, “The most intriguing part of this pamphlet, less
paradoxical than may first appear, is that we forget a high percentage
of the books we actually read, in fact, we conjure a virtual image of
sorts, not so much of what the book said, but of what it made us think
about.“
Bayard's seemingly paradoxical book makes the case for literary laziness. In How to Talk About Books You Haven't Read,
Bayard argues that the key to appreciating the classics is through a
quick skim, not deep immersion; cover to cover isn't merely
impractical, it's downright passé.
Quoting Eco himself—he is
the subject of a chapter in Bayard's treatise entitled "Books you have
heard of in which Umberto Eco shows it is wholly unnecessary to have
held a book in your hand, to be able to speak about it in detail, as
long as you listen to and read what others say about it"—Bayard reminds
us all that there is no shame in asserting your pseudo-literacy. He
describes the varieties of “non-reading”—from books that you've never
heard of to books that you've read and forgotten—and offers advice on
how to turn a sticky social situation into an occasion for creative
brilliance. Practical, funny, and thought-provoking, How to Talk About Books You Haven't Read
is in the end a love letter to books, offering a whole new perspective
on how we read and absorb books, the art of being well read without
reading well.
“A high-low treatise that will remind some readers of Wayne Koestenbaum
(a writer I talk about even though I've never read him . . . this slim
volume manages to deceive the reader in 185 pages. You think you're
going to be told how to act at a cocktail party when someone opines
about a book you don't know—and you are; but at the same time you're
going to learn enough about the book to discuss it . . . It's a romp,
in other words but a romp of the most decidedly literary variety. At
least I think it is. Because of course, I haven't read it." —Sara Nelson, "Faking It," Publishers Weekly
This event is co-sponsored by the Cultural Services of the French Embassy
About Pierre Bayard
Pierre Bayard is a professor of French literature at the University of Paris VIII and a psychoanalyst. He is the author of Who Killed Roger Ackroyd? and many other books.
About Umberto Eco
Umberto Eco teaches Semiotics and is the President of the Scuola
superiore di Studi Umanistici at the University of Bologna. In 1980 Eco
debuted as a novelist with The Name of the Rose for which he received the Strega Award. He is the author of the History of Beauty. His new books are On Ugliness and Turning Back The Clock, Hot Wars and Media Populism.
About Paul Holdengräber
Paul Holdengräber is the Director of Public Programs—now known as "LIVE
from the NYPL"—for The Research Libraries of The New York Public
Library.
"Delacroix ou la mémoire en défaut": sur un ouvrage d'H. Damisch, par C. Champy (nonfiction.fr)
"De l'horizontal au vertical : échanges écrits avec Jochen Gerner", entretien par Pilau Daures
Site Réforme Humanisme Renaissance: rhr16.fr
"Twitter: un salon littéraire virtuel?" (BibliObs)
"Le goût de l'archive est polyglotte". Entretien avec Sanjay Subrahmanyam (laviedesidees.fr)
POP-EN-STOCK Bazar d´études sur la culture populaire contemporaine
Fantômas et l'Européenne du crime
Écrire la sculpture (XIXe-XXe siècles): enregistrements en ligne
Site "Théâtre de femmes de l'Ancien Régime"
Ouverture du site poesieromande.ch
"Rentrée 2012 : première numérique pour un gros éditeur français", par H. Artus (Rue89)
Le Verger n°1 (site Cornucopia): Rabelais (Gargantua et Le Quart Livre)
Lettre de la Magdeleine de R. Klapka à propos de la collection Le livre, la vie
"Quand Bourdieu photographiait l'Algérie" (francetv.fr)
Flaubert: sa bibliothèque numérisée
2012: année Rousseau. Un dossier d'articles sur le blog Mezetulle (C. Kintzler)
Joyce, Woolf, Bergson... dans le domaine public
Revista Sala Preta, n°11, 2011
"Google n’annule pas Borges, il l’exacerbe". Entretien avec F. Bon (letierslivre.net)