Poetics of Childhood: Marie NDiaye, Le bon Denis (2025)
Within the framework of the Mercure de France's autobiographical series "Traits et portraits," which for years has fostered hybrid self-portraits combining image and text, NDiaye adds another kaleidoscope to her own literary exploration of familial constellations—this time under the sign of fatherhood. Marie NDiaye's "Le bon Denis" (2025) is a work of only 136 pages, yet it joins the author's autobiographical quest—and further complicates it. With her "Autoportrait en vert" (2005), published in the same series, NDiaye had already presented a portrait of her mother—a text that revealed less than it obscured, that portrayed autobiographical narration not as an act of remembrance or confession, but as a poetic-performative practice, a play with appearance, displacement, and uncertainty. "Le bon Denis" stands in this tradition and simultaneously intensifies the poetic gesture of unknowing and construction in the face of the biographical void left by her father. The volume, divided into four prose pieces, explores the absence and profound turmoil of the father who once abandoned the family – without offering a psychological explanation or resolution to this loss. Instead, NDiaye presents a literary kaleidoscope that operates with shifts in perspective, ironic language, the interplay of fact and fiction, and intermedial insertions.
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