- Josipovici, Gabriel
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▪ British authorin full Gabriel David Josipoviciborn Oct. 8, 1940, Nice, FranceFrench-born British novelist, literary theorist (literary criticism), dramatist, and short-story writer whose work is characterized by its experimental form and its attention to language.From 1945 Josipovici was reared in Egypt. He was educated at Victoria College, Cairo, and attended Cheltenham (England) College and St. Edmund Hall, Oxford (B.A., 1961). He joined the faculty of the University of Sussex at Brighton in 1963.Josipovici laid the philosophical framework for his fiction in his books of criticism, including The World and the Book (1971), The Lessons of Modernism (1977), Writing and the Body (1982), The Mirror of Criticism (1983), The Book of God (1988), and Text and Voice (1992). His novels grew progressively experimental. The first three—The Inventory (1968), Words (1971), and The Present (1975)—are written mostly in dialogue, whereas Migrations (1977) and The Air We Breathe (1981) are composed of a series of images and sound patterns following a loosely narrative form. Among his other novels are The Echo Chamber (1980), Conversations in Another Room (1984), Contre-Jour (1986), The Big Glass (1991), and In a Hotel Garden (1993). The radio play Vergil Dying (1981) is perhaps his most acclaimed drama. He also wrote the short-fiction collections Mobius the Stripper (1974), Four Stories (1977), and In the Fertile Land (1987).
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Universalium. 2010.