Japan and its own de-Westernization: Emmanuel Ruben

Emmanuel Ruben's "L'usage du Japon" (2025) portrays the country as a "topographical lightning strike": not an exotic counter-image to the West, but a fractal, trembling archipelago that defies any definitive definition. Ruben reads the country as a geographer and draftsman, shaped by a "tatamized" pop-culture childhood of judo, Nintendo, and manga, and confronts this imaginary Japan with an often Americanized, urban, disorderly reality. Between ukiyo-e, comics, maps, and Zen gardens, he discovers Japan as a realm of the clear line, the miniature, and the infraordinary, where nature is totally stylized and everyday life ritualized. Figures like Ino Tadataka become mirrors of his own writing: to measure here does not mean to possess, but to physically expose oneself to the fragment. Kyoto appears as a moss-covered graveyard of the gods, heavy with the sacred, while Shinkansen bullet trains, high-tech toilets, and glass cities mark a silent ultramodernity. The review highlights this tension as a permanent “de-Westernization”: Japan forces a dilution of the self, an acceptance of the incomplete, and the realization that map, text, and image never catch up with the territory – which is why Japan ultimately remains less a destination than a process, a vibrant school of seeing and disappearing.

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France's Contamination 2036: Robert Merle and Emmanuel Ruben

Emmanuel Ruben's novel "Malville" (Stock, 2024) fits into a long line of apocalyptic literature, ranging from biblical prophecies to Robert Merle's "Malevil" (1972, English translation 1975), whose title is deliberately invoked here as an intertextual reference: On the level of social critique, "Malville" is a reckoning with French nuclear policy since the 1970s. Today, Ruben meticulously traces how political decisions—from Macron's revival of the nuclear program to the rise of the far right and the dissolution of the European Union—led to catastrophe. Robert Merle's "Malevil" is narrated from the first-person perspective of the farmer Emmanuel Comte, who, after a sudden nuclear strike, survives in the isolated castle of Malevil along with a small group of friends and neighbors. Even before the actual plot begins, it becomes clear that Rubens' "Malville" is intended to be read as an intertextual dialogue with Merle – a continuation, variation and at the same time a critical reversal of his apocalyptic novel.

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Rentrée littéraire: contemporary French literature
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