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Introduction

Jean-Pierre Boulé
Affiliation:
Nottingham Trent University
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Summary

‘Quelque part, j'avais écrit dans mon journal, avant de savoir que jétais malade: “Mort du sida. Indication superbe d'une biographie”’ (‘Somewhere I had written in my diary, before knowing that I was ill, “Died of AIDS. Superb note to strike for a biography”’). This sentence sums up perfectly the writer Hervé Guibert's complete attitude to the disease. In imagining himself dead he can already see the advantages held out to a biographer by the circumstances of his death. There is never any question of wallowing in self-pity over his own fate: in transcending his condition, in reaching towards the fictional enterprise which is what biography is all about, he rejoices in the idea of such an inscription. Hervé Guibert died on 27 December 1991. He had tried to commit suicide in the night of 12 to 13 December 1991. That date no doubt meant a lot to him. Having been born on 14 December 1955, he probably did not wish to see his thirty-sixth birthday. Fate decided otherwise; he survived another 14 days in hospital.

Hervé Guibert had got AIDS. He had said so in a book called Á l'ami qui ne m'a pas sauvé la vie (Ami), published in 1990. This book made him famous and brought him to general public attention, especially after his appearance on television on 16 March 1990 in the books programme ‘Apostrophes’.

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Chapter
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Hervé Guibert
Voices of the Self
, pp. 1 - 12
Publisher: Liverpool University Press
Print publication year: 1999

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