
New Books Network Aubrey Gabel, "The Politics of Play: Oulipo and the Legacy of French Literary Ludics" (Northwestern UP, 2025)
Dec 15, 2025
Aubrey Gabel, an Assistant Professor of French at Columbia University, dives into the intriguing world of literary ludics in this conversation. She explores how French authors used playful methods to navigate political turmoil post-World War II. Gabel highlights Oulipo's unique strategies, including Raymond Queneau's and Georges Perec's experimental writing that encodes history. She also discusses Monique Wittig's feminist perspectives and the impact of playful forms on diverse political expressions. Prepare for a thought-provoking exploration of language and politics!
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Ludics Beyond Play Vs. Game
- Literary ludics avoids the binary of play versus game and treats playful methods as varied formal and social strategies.
- Aubrey Gabel frames 'ludique' to capture constraints, procedures, and authorial postures across disciplines.
Politics As Multiple Dimensions
- Politics can mean overt allegiances, an author's public role, or literary-field conflicts and struggles.
- Gabel uses a broad notion of politics to read how playful forms encode and enact political positions.
Oulipo's Enduring Legacy
- Oulipo acts as a dominant touchstone in postwar French formalism and shaped later debates about constraints.
- Gabel studies multiple generations plus adjacent writers to trace Oulipo's legacy and networked influence.








