The dismantled republic and a whale skeleton: Aurélien Bellanger

In 2023, the narrator spends his time exploring caves in the French provinces, collecting the bones of a whale that died on the Normandy coast, and participating in the Parisian protests against pension reform. Aurélien Bellanger's "Grottes, baleine, révolution" (2025) creates a poetics-political triptych of modernity in which caves, whale bones, and revolutionary attempts become conceptual figures in a historical reflection. The book transforms the cartographic project of earlier works into a topography of the subterranean: "Grottes" represent consciousness as geological space, "baleine" death as a natural process, and "révolution" the exhausted idea of ​​collective renewal. From the fusion of autobiographical experience, geological empiricism, and mythical symbolism emerges a poetics of digging—thinking as sedimentation, writing as earthwork. Bellanger transforms storytelling into a form of knowledge in which matter, memory, and history intertwine, thus formulating a modernity in which knowledge signifies not enlightenment but obscuration. In relation to Bellanger's "Le vingtième siècle" and "Les Derniers Jours du Parti socialiste," this new book appears as a reversal and embodiment of their intellectual system. While the revolution was treated there as an ideological or archival trace—once as a technocratic concept of suspicion wielded by the state, once as a rhetorical shell of the flagging left—here it becomes a tectonic, almost telluric event, a force of nature inherent in history. Bellanger takes the Benjaminian idea of ​​"remembrance" from the library back into the earth: thought descends into the darkness of matter to rescue what has been forgotten. The revolution and the dead whale become relics of the real, fossils of the political, which can only be moved through writing.

➙ To the article

Aurélien Bellanger as Lorenzaccio: Les derniers jours du Parti socialiste

With his latest novel, "Les derniers jours du Parti socialiste" (The Last Days of the Socialist Party), published this fall of 2024, Aurélien Bellanger moves between political fiction, roman à clef, and social satire, incorporating elements of both utopia and dystopia in an increasingly authoritarian republic where secular ideals are instrumentalized to enforce Islamophobic policies. The novel paints a picture of society in which the traditional political camps of the republic, or rather the boundaries between left and right, are blurred, and nationalist and identitarian movements dominate the political spectrum.

➙ To the article

Just declared a state of emergency and a curfew

[On the occasion of the Paris summer riots of 2023]

Without sleeping and definitely being able to read the reportages of the Algerian national television, I am looking for new French news across the Canary Islands and neigeux d'un mauvais téléviseur. This can be used to identify the silhouette of the family of the presenter of the daily journal. J'étais curieux de savoir comment la mort de Machelin allait être traitée.

Read more

This article is written in German and can be found at https://rentree.de. Automatic translations into English and French are available. English, French.

A flash of insight in the moment of danger: Walter Benjamin in Aurélien Bellanger

"When Scholem saw his friend again in 1938 after more than ten years, he noticed that his hair had turned white and he had gained weight. I cannot help but imagine the grotesque figure of a Benjamin who has grown disproportionately and occupies the entire volume of the National Library – a Benjamin made of papier-mâché or wax melts, forming the negative imprint of the library, but who in extremis would have found emergency exits from the nightmare of Babel, without unfortunately being able to use them for himself."

➙ To the article

Telereality fictions by Bellanger and de Vigan

Authors also watch television. Media realities become the subject of novels (as oral narratives once were), and perhaps even poetics. The two novels by Delphine de Vigan, Les enfants sont rois, and by Aurélien Bellanger, Reality showThese books appear twenty years after France's entry into the new television landscape. According to Bellanger, his starting point for his book was the sale of Endemol, while Delphine de Vigan's was the realization, through a television program, that there are children who are treated like stars as very young YouTube influencers.

Read more

This article is written in German and can be found at https://rentree.de. Automatic translations into English and French are available. English, French.

Rentrée littéraire: contemporary French literature
Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies to give you the best possible user experience. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognizing you when you return to our site, and helps our team understand which sections of the site are most interesting and useful to you.