Jean-Joseph Rabéarivelo

Madagascan author
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Quick Facts
Born:
March 4, 1901, Tananarive, Madagascar
Died:
June 22, 1937, Tananarive (aged 36)

Jean-Joseph Rabéarivelo (born March 4, 1901, Tananarive, Madagascar—died June 22, 1937, Tananarive) was a Malagasy writer, one of the most important of African poets writing in French, considered to be the father of modern literature in his native land.

Rabéarivelo, a largely self-educated man who earned his living as a proofreader for the Imerina Printing Press, wrote seven volumes of poetry before his tragic death. Presque-Songes (1934; “Nearly Dreams”) and Traduit de la nuit (1935; “Translation of the Night”) are considered to be the most important. His early work is closely imitative of late 19th-century French poetry, especially that of Charles Baudelaire and of a literary group known as the Fantaisites, who wrote melancholy verse expressing a sense of futility. His later work is more remote and impersonal, retaining a Baudelairean sense of form but exhibiting a more mature, individual style. A final collection of poems, Vieilles Chansons du pays Imérina (“Old Songs of the Imerina Country”), published two years after his death, is based on poetic love dialogues (hain-teny) adapted from Malagasy vernacular tradition.

The mythical world Rabéarivelo creates in his poetry is an intensely personal one dominated by visions of death, catastrophe, and alienation, which are all mitigated only occasionally by hope of salvation or resurrection. The overall impression is one of a surrealistic other world in which natural objects such as birds, trees, stars, cows, and fish have human emotions and human figures seem cosmic or semidivine.

Illustration of "The Lamb" from "Songs of Innocence" by William Blake, 1879. poem; poetry
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It is thought that disappointment at being unable to visit the France whose poets he so long admired, coupled with a melancholy temperament and drug addiction, were the causes of Rabéarivelo’s suicide in 1937.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.