- Jean-Pierre Brisset
Jean-Pierre Brisset (La Sauvagère, "Orne" 1837 – La Ferté-Macé, "Orne" 1919) was a French writer born of peasant farmers.
He was an outsider writer, much like
Henri Rousseau was an outsider artist. His writings are in publication as of 2004. He is a saint on the'Pataphysics calendar.Brisset was an autodidact: as a boy, he learned pastry baking. He served in the army, and became head of the railway station of Angers, and later of l'Aigle. After publishing a book on swimming, and one on French, he undertakes his major philosophical work: to spread his theory that Man's origins are in the water, and that Man descends from Frogs. He finds ample proofs in comparing French and frog language (like "logement"= dwelling, comes from "l'eau" = water). Very serious about his
morosophy , he writes several books and pamphlets expounding his irrefutable proofs, and has them printed and distributed at his own expense.In 1912, the writer Jules Romains obtains a copy of "God's Mystery" and "The Human Origins". With some accomplices, he organises a rigged election of a «Prince of Thinkers», and Brisset gets elected. Brisset is called to Paris by the Election Committee in 1913, where he is pompously received and acclaimed. He participates in several ceremonies and a banquet and pronounces emotional words of thanks for this unexpected late recognition of his work. The next days the newpapers uncover the joke.
The "Complete Works" of Brisset has recently been reprinted by Marc
Décimo , Dijon, Les presses du réel, 2001. In an "Essay", "Jean-Pierre Brisset, Prince des Penseurs, inventeur, grammairien et prophète", Dijon, Les presses du réel, 2001, Marc Décimo has given a biography, explanations about Brisset's delirium about frogs as ancestors of the mankind. We can also find into this book translations in several languages (European languages, Wolof, Armenian, Arabic, Houma, etc.) . There are also the main texts written about Brisset by JulesRomains , MarcelDuchamp ,André Breton , RaymondQueneau ,Michel Foucault . In 2004 the "Art of Swimming" (as a frog) was published in paperback.Around 2001,
Ernestine Chassebœuf wrote several letters to French politicians, universities, railway stations, directors of libraries, psychiatic hospitals, to ask whether they could not name a street, university, etc. after Brisset. Their answers are published on a Brisset website, [ [http://pagesperso-orange.fr/chambernac/brisset.htm Site sur Brisset Jean-Pierre ] at pagesperso-orange.fr] but until now no "rue Jean-Pierre Brisset" exists.Notes
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