The Night

The Night
Author: Michèle Bernstein
Publisher: Book Works
Language: English
Pages: 160
Size: 14.8 x 19 cm
Weight: 300 g
Binding: Softcover
ISBN: 978 1 906012 52 6
Price: €15.00
Product Description

Translated from La Nuit, 1961, by Clodagh Kinsella, with a new preface for the English edition by Michèle Bernstein

‘La Nuit is about the Paris of 1957 – the one I see when I close my eyes (the nostalgic note). There’s no need to cry, it’s still there. We can piece together the image from the scattered pieces of the jigsaw. And if La Nuit is a love story, it’s not for him, or for her, or for someone else, or for me. It’s a love story, a story of lost love, for the streets.’ – from the new preface, Michèle Bernstein

Here, translated into English for the first time, is the second novel of Michèle Bernstein, a founding member of the Situationist International. Following All the King’s Horses, it was also written for cash, and again cannibalises the plot of Les Liaisons dangeureuses, featuring the same characters as her debut: Gilles, Geneviève, Carole and Bertrand. The story remains the same, but the book is different, this time parodying the style of the nouveau roman, with its elongated sentences and non-linear sense of time and place. As its protagonists drift through the streets of Paris, through the entanglements of a ménage à trois, and the ennui of a summer holiday on the Côte d’Azur, The Night is littered with détournements – unattributed quotations and knowing winks at situationist practices – and clues that give insight into the lives and spirit of both the author and her husband Guy Debord.

With a new preface for the English edition by the author, The Night has been translated by Clodagh Kinsella, and edited by Everyone Agrees, and designed by Erik Hartin, as part of a project with After The Night, a détournement of La Nuit, set in London, 2013. Everyone Agrees are a collective who operate and publish out of London and New York.

Common Objectives is a series of quick-fire, rapid-response projects from artist/writer collectives or individual art practices engaged with emerging political struggles, rejecting the idea of culture as a playground for the elite, engaging in the potent mix of free discourse, solidarity and the production of new desires and prepared to break open old worlds, either in the virtual space of communication and networks, or in the concrete world of action, discourse and distribution. Other projects in the series include: Move...ment, a new issue of the journal ...ment, edited by Federica Bueti; and Pre-enactments by Victoria Halford and Steve Beard.