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| Michel Houellebecq (real name Michel Thomas) | |
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| Born | February 26 1958 |
| Occupation | Novelist, filmmaker and poet |
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[Mourir Official website] | |
Michel Houellebecq (pronounced [miʃɛl wɛlˈbɛk]) (real name Michel Thomas), born 26 February 1958 (birth certificate) or 1956Denis Demonpion : Houellebecq non autorisé, enquête sur un phénomène (2005), on the French island of Réunion is a controversial and award-winning French novelist. He left France and lived in Ireland for some years. He currently lives in Spain.
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Houellebecq lived his first years on the French island of Réunion. He also lived in Algeria for a period of time. At the age of six, he went to France to live with his grandmother, a communist. Her name was Houellebecq, which became his pen name. Later, he went to Lycée Henri Moissan, a high school at Meaux in the north-east of Paris, as a boarder. He then went to Paris in Lycée Chaptal to follow preparation courses in order to join French Grandes écoles (elite schools). He began attending the Institut National Agronomique Paris-Grignon in 1975. He started a literary review called Karamazov and wrote poetry.
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Houellebecq graduated as an agronomical engineer in 1978. He later worked as a computer administrator in Paris, including at the French National Assembly, before he became the so-called "pop star of the single generation". Gaining fame with the novel Extension du domaine de la lutte in 1994 (translated into English by Paul Hammond as Whatever), he won the 1998 Prix Novembre with his novel Les Particules Élémentaires (translated by Frank Wynne) and published as Atomised (Heinemann, UK) or, The Elementary Particles (Knopf, US). The novel became an instant "nihilistic classic". The New York Times, however, described it as "a deeply repugnant read." The novel won Houellebecq—along with his translator, Frank Wynne—the International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award in 2002.
The author\'s following novel, Plateforme (2001), earned him a wider reputation. It is a romance, told mostly in the first-person by an aging male arts administrator, with many sex scenes and an approbation of prostitution and sex tourism. The novel\'s depiction of life and its explicit criticism of Islam and the Muslim faith, together with an interview its author gave to the magazine Lire, led to accusations against Houellebecq by several organisations, including France\'s Human Rights League, the Mecca-based World Islamic League and the mosques of Paris and Lyon. Charges were brought to trial, in circumstances reminiscent of Britain\'s Salman Rushdie affair; but a panel of three judges, delivering their verdict to a packed Paris courtroom, acquitted the author of having provoked racial hatred, ascribing Houellebecq\'s opinions to the legitimate right of criticizing religions.
His most recent novel is The Possibility of an Island (translated by Gavin Bowd. Original title La Possibilité d\'une île), is a novel that alternates between three characters\' narratives, Daniel 1 (a current day comedian) and Daniel 24 and 25, neo-human clones of the Daniel 1.
He has also released a music CD Présence humaine, on Bertrand Burgalat\'s Tricatel label in 2000, on which he sings over a rock band backing.
A recurrent theme in Houellebecq\'s novels is the intrusion of free-market economics into human relationships and sexuality. Whatever, (Original title, Extension du domaine de la lutte, which literally translates as "extension of the domain of the struggle") alludes to economic competition extending into the search for relationships. As the book says, a free market has winners and losers, and the same applies to relationships in a society that does not enforce monogamy. Westerners of both sexes already seek exotic locations and climates by visiting developing countries in organized trips. In Platform, the logical conclusion is that they would respond positively to sex tourism organized and sold in a corporate and professional fashion.
Extension du domaine de la lutte has been filmed by Philippe Harel and adapted as a play in Danish by Jens Albinus for the Royal Danish Theatre.
The English translation of his novel Platform was adapted as a play by the theatre company Carnal Acts for the Institute of Contemporary Arts (ICA) in London in December 2004. A Spanish adaptation of the novel by Calixto Bieito, performed by Companyia Teatre Romea, premiered at the 2006 Edinburgh International Festival.
Along with Loo Hui Phang, Houellebecq wrote the manuscript for the movie Monde extérieur (2002) by David Rault and David Warren.
Les Particules Élémentaires has been made into a German movie, Elementarteilchen, directed by Oskar Roehler, starring Moritz Bleibtreu and Franka Potente. The film premiered at the 2006 Berlinale.
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