Home | Blog | Books | Olivier Rolin, The Invention of the World

Date posted: October 21, 2007

Olivier Rolin, The Invention of the World

Every day around the world people are robbed, killed, raped and cheated. Every day around the world people are born, fall in love, get married, divorce and die.

In L’invention du monde (The Invention of the World) French author Olivier Rolin recounts the events that take place on one calendar day around the world. One calendar day, that is 48 hours, because 48 hours pass between the moment a date, let’s say 21 March 1989, begins on one side of the international date line and ends on the other side.

21 March 1989 is a day like any other. The Invention of the World is a novel like no other. To say that it is ambitious is an understatement. But it succeeds in every aspect.

As Italo Calvino writes in Six Memos for the Next Millennium, and as Olivier Rolin recalls in the postscript to The Invention of the World, "Overambitious projects may be objectionable in many fields, but not in literature. Literature remains alive only if we set ourselves immeasurable goals, far beyond all hope of achievement. Only if poets and writers set themselves tasks that no one else dares imagine will literature continue to have a function."

In preparation for The Invention of the World, Olivier Rolin collected and read nearly 500 newspapers from around the world published 22 March 1989. A project like this is unthinkable without the help of others. The newspapers had been sent to him by employees of French embassies and were subsequently translated by various assistants. Rolin read everything, from newsflashes to weather reports and from exchange rates to obituaries and classifieds. Everything could be the origin of a story or provide the context for another.

Although it may sound like a dreary compilation of facts, The Invention of the World is a real page-turner. Rolin’s baroque prose takes you in one sentence from South America to Japan and back while briefly mentioning an accident in Manila. In one rollercoaster chapter he takes a tour of fires happening around the world on 21 March 1989.

The nature of the project poses restrictions, but it also offers unprecedented opportunities. Most novels extend in time. The Invention of the World extends in space. It is set in suburbs in the US and villages in Africa and Asia. It is urban, metropolitan and rural. Somewhere in the world, that 21 March 1989, it is hot, cold, rainy or sunny. Somewhere a storm causes damage, somewhere else a lone runner gets lost in a forest and has to wait until the morning fog has disappeared before she can reorientate herself.

Every chapter, and there are 48 chapters, of The Invention of the World refers to a classic of world literature. There are references to Borges, James Joyce, Ovid, Melville, Dante, Mallarme, Kafka, Camoes, Marco Polo, Italo Calvino, Homer, the bible and of course Jules Verne’s Around the World in 80 Days and Georges Perec’s Life. A User’s Manual. They add to the joy of reading The Invention of the World. I couldn’t resist a smile when Winckler and Percival Barnabooth made their appearance.

The Invention of the World shows how life is governed by chance. Shit happens and so do accidents. Some people are lucky others not so. A stray bullet misses one person at an inch, but hits another. People die in car crashes and fires. Others narrowly escape. Some people get away, others are arrested for no reason whatsoever. Inevitably bad news and bad luck dominates. Inevitably, because the novel is based on events that made news headlines. But Rolin also mentions those to whom luck smiled. A man wins the lottery. A girl wins a miss contest.

Despite the near endless array of mischief and mayhem, The Invention of the World is a celebration of life. Towards the end of the final chapter, as the day draws to an end, language begins to dissolve. The entire novel is put between quotation marks, except for the last sentence. It can only end in one way, silence.

Note: As of this writing L’Invention du Monde is NOT available in English translation.

Last update: October 8, 2008

Reading

Michael Tomasello: Origins of Human Communication

Arundhati Roy: The God of Small Things

Just finished

Robert McNeill and William H. McNeill: The Human Web. A Bird's-Eye View of World History

Gilles Fauconnier and Mark Turner: The Way We Think. Conceptual Blending and the Mind's Hidden Complexities

Véronique Fabbri: Danse et Philosophie. Une Pensée en Construction

Tyler Cowen: Creative Destruction. How Globalization Is Changing the World's Cultures

William Easterly: The White Man's Burden

2008

George Lakoff and Mark Johnson: Metaphors We Live By

J.M. Coetzee: Foe

Gregory Clark: A Farewell to Alms. A Brief Economic History of the World

Chinua Achebe: Things Fall Apart

Dani Rodrik: One Economics, Many Recipes. Globalization, Institutions and Economic Growth

Bill Bryson: A Short History of Nearly Everything

Alan Weisman: The World Without Us

Jeffrey Sachs: Common Wealth. Economics for a Crowded Planet

Dan Ariely: Predictably Irrational

Richard Flanagan: The Unknown Terrorist

Pascal Mercier: Night Train to Lisbon

J.G. Ballard: The Atrocity Exhibition

Marshall McLuhan: Understanding Media

Tim Harford: The Logic of life

Nathan Englander: The Ministry of Special Cases

Ray Jackendoff: Foundations of Language

Marshall McLuhan: The Medium is the Massage

Will Self: The Book of Dave

Saskia Sassen: A Sociology of Globalization

Pankaj Mishra: Temptations of the West. How to be Modern in India, Pakistan and Beyond

Pavan K. Varma: Being Indian. Inside the Real India

2007

Sarah Murray: Moveable Feasts. The Incredible Journeys of the Things We Eat

Dave Eggers: What is the What

Umberto Eco: On Ugliness

Marisha Pessl: Special Topics in Calamity Physics

Jacques Ranciere: The Politics of Aesthetics

Olivier Rolin: L'invention du Monde

George Zhibin Gu: China and the New World Order

Julian Stallabrass: Art Incorporated

Saskia Sassen: Territory, Authority, Rights. From Medieval to Global Assemblages

Cormac McCarthy: The Road

Zygmunt Bauman: Consuming Life

Don DeLillo: Valparaiso

Rem Koolhaas: Delirious New York

Frédéric Beigbeder: 99 francs (€ 14:99)

Paul Collier: The Bottom Billion. Why the Poorest Countries Are Failing and What Can Be Done About It

Don DeLillo: Americana

Tim Harford: The Undercover Economist

Marc Levinson: The Box. How the Shipping Container Made the World Smaller and the World Economy Bigger

Zygmunt Bauman: Liquid Modernity

Peter Sloterdijk: Im Weltinnenraum des Kapitals

Orhan Pamuk: Snow

Haruki Murakami: Kafka on the Shore

Toni Morrison: Beloved

Kiran Desai: The Inheritance of Loss

Edward Luce: In Spite of the Gods. The Strange Rise of Modern India

2006

Patricia Highsmith: The Talented Mr Ripley

Jared Diamond: Collapse

Peter Sloterdijk: Sphären

Slavoj Zizek: The Parallax View

James Kynge: China Shakes the World. The Rise of a Hungry Nation

Mari Akasaka: Vibrator

Ali Smith: The Accidental

Steven D. Levitt and Stephen J. Dubner: Freakonomics

John Kennedy Toole: A Confederacy of Dunces

Truman Capote: In Cold Blood

J.M. Coetzee: Youth

Bret Easton Ellis: Less Than Zero

Joseph Conrad: Heart of Darkness

Hélène Cixous: Stigmata. Escaping Texts

J.D. Salinger: The Catcher in the Rye

Hunter S. Thompson: Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas

Michel Houellebecq: La possibilité d'une ile

Henry Miller: Tropic of Cancer

Ian McEwan: Saturday

2005

Mark Haddon: The curious incident of the dog in the night-time

Ian McEwan: Atonement

Orhan Pamuk: The Black Book

Bruno Latour: Reassembling the Social

Jean Baudrillard: The conspiracy of art

Georges Perec: W ou le souvenir d'enfance

Slavoj Zizek: Enjoy your symptom

Michel Foucault: Discipline and Punish

Michel Foucault: The archeology of knowledge

DBC Pierre: Vernon God Little

Yann Martel: Life of Pi

Jared Diamond: Guns: Germs and Steel

Zadie Smith: White Teeth

J.M. Coetzee: Disgrace

Salman Rushdie: Midnight's Children

Alan Hollinghurst: The Line of Beauty

Philip Roth: Portnoy's Complaint

J.M. Coetzee: Elizabeth Costello

Slavoj Zizek: Looking Awry

Mikhail Bulgakov: The Master and Margarita

Recent Posts
  • The Credit Crisis: Some Preliminary Analyses

    For many years to come the current financial crisis will provide material for PhD theses, academic papers and special issues of scholarly journals. Since history is still being written, it’s too early for firm conclusions, but some interesting analyses are already starting to appear. If only people would read these papers before forming an opinion or making some policy decisions.

  • The Other Financial Crisis

    As the credit crisis makes news headlines around the world, Zimbabwe is still caught in the stranglehold of hyperinflation.

  • Splitting For Real

    In 1974 American artist Gordon Matta-Clark divided a house in two. This year a Cambodian couple did the same, albeit for different reasons.

Archives

Browse the archive