Mysticism and Resistance: Jean de Saint-Cheron with Georges Bernanos

Jean de Saint-Cheron's "Malestroit: vie et mort d'une résistante mystique" (2025) reconstructs the extraordinary life of the Breton nun Yvonne Beauvais, who navigated the complexities of charitable work, mystical experience, and political resistance. The novel combines meticulous archival research with literary imagination, intertwining documentary research, biographical narrative, and a mystical inner perspective. Yvonne's journey leads from early childhood religiosity through the establishment of a clinic to her active role in the resistance: she hides those persecuted, organizes escapes, and endures interrogations and torture by the Gestapo. At the same time, the novel depicts her mystical phenomena—tears of blood, visions, stigmata—and the Church's skepticism, which ultimately culminated in the cancellation of her beatification process in 1960 ("too many miracles"). Saint-Cheron marks where historical documents speak and where narrative reconstruction begins; thus, she creates the portrait of a woman whose life unfolds at the intersection of history, faith, and political danger, and whose significance remains elusive to this day. – The review highlights how Saint-Cheron reflects on the boundaries between fact and fiction without blurring them: The novel is neither hagiography nor a skeptical demystification, but a hybrid text that challenges the reader to consider the tensions between personal sanctity, institutional control, and political reality. It demonstrates how the novel intertwines religious-mystical aspects (suffering, stigma, miracles) with the brutality of the occupation (torture, threat of deportation, underground work), thereby revealing a dual form of martyrdom. The review also emphasizes the relevance of the narrative polyphony—documenting first-person perspective, diary fragments, witness statements—and the intertextual references, including to Bernanos's "Sous le soleil de Satan," for understanding the character. Overall, Malestroit appears as a literary experiment exploring the possibility of historically narrating a mystical life, and the review makes it clear that its greatest strength lies in this reflective ambivalence: holiness, trauma, resistance, and memory enter into a complex relationship that extends far beyond the biographical material.

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Rentrée littéraire: contemporary French literature
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