Noise and Silence: Anne Savelli
Anne Savelli's novel "Bruits" (Inculte, 2026) traces, over the meticulously timed span of a single day, the acoustic upheaval of an anonymous metropolis, triggered by an early morning police raid. The noise of this raid propagates through apartments, bodies, and consciousnesses, making the city perceptible less as a visual space than as an auditory one. At the center is the young girl F., for whom sounds become existential, while around her unfolds a polyphonic score of police violence, everyday noise, institutional protocols, and private screams, revealing individual biographies only in fragmentary detail. This review reads the novel as an acoustic ontology in which noise is not merely a backdrop but social, political, and poetological material: sounds mark power relations, subvert boundaries of privacy, and replace narrative causality with layering and resonance. Particularly striking is the analysis of permeability—of bodies, walls, syntax—through which Savelli conceives of the city as a resonating chamber for social violence, as well as the interpretation of silence as a fragile, utopian escape route, attainable only imaginatively and temporarily. The review shows how the text itself becomes noise and compels reading to listening; at the same time, it emphasizes that "Bruits" narrates less about events than about states of being and, in its rejection of classical narration, formulates a quiet but radical political gesture: the withdrawal of the subject from a world of constant sound.
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