A negative trend: Audrey Jarre
Audrey Jarre's debut novel, "Les négatifs" (2025), is not only a novel set in a big city and an exploration of female subjectivity, but also a contribution to contemporary literature on seeing, being seen, and the role of images. Photographic metaphors permeate the entire novel. Already in the epigraph—a quote from Roland Barthes' "La Chambre claire" about photography as a "micro-expérience de la mort"—Jarre suggests that her text is in close dialogue with image theory. Photography is not only thematically addressed but structurally implemented. The story follows Alice, a young French woman completing an internship in New York, where she enters into an intense and increasingly toxic relationship with photography student Nathan. The novel's fundamental narrative motif is both becoming visible and simultaneously withdrawing from it. Caught between the desire to be seen, to be part of an urban bohemian scene, and the fear of losing herself, Alice oscillates in a world of art, surface, emotion, and imagery. Her relationship with Nathan, but also with his charismatic girlfriend Léonore, becomes a projection screen for Alice's insecurities and longings.
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