The creeping rise of fascism in France: Nathalie Quintane

Nathalie Quintane's "Soixante-dix fantômes (choses vues)" (La fabrique éditions, 2025) is a literary snapshot of contemporary France, which—almost imperceptibly yet inexorably—is shifting from democratic normality to authoritarian routines. In 61 pointed miniatures, Quintane shows how far-right attitudes are taking root in everyday life: in casual gestures, in language use, in the dehumanization of the most vulnerable, and in aesthetic references that bring the reactionary past back into the present. The subtitle alludes to Victor Hugo's "Choses vues," whose republican narrative of upward mobility is here reversed: while Hugo documented political emancipation, Quintane registers democratic decline. The review emphasizes this deliberate counter-reading to Hugo and highlights how Quintane interprets everyday details as early political warning signs, whose "ghosts"—historical and contemporary—create a climate of fear, paralysis, and social coldness. Thus, the book emerges as an equally poetic and alarming account of a society on the brink, urging the reader not to overlook the subtle signs of an authoritarian normalization.

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Grotesque Republic: Nathalie Quintane

Nathalie Quintane (born 1964) is a poet, novelist, and teacher at a collège in Digne. With her novel "Tout va bien se passer" (2023, English translation: Everything Will Be Alright), she presents a work that uniquely combines literary forms, historical reflection, postmodern irony, and sharp political analysis. At its heart is a grotesque scene: a minister, reduced to his torso, traverses Paris on his way to the Élysée Palace. He is accompanied by the narrator's perspective as well as by historical and fictional voices, most notably Lucile Franque, a real but virtually unknown 18th-century painter who enters the novel as a time traveler. The novel takes us through the Élysée, not as a place of state dignity, but as a stage for absurd rituals of representation. The novel unfolds a textual tapestry of scenic miniatures, essayistic interludes, surreal passages, comic exaggeration, and documentary meticulousness. The ministerial torso represents a politics that has lost all integrity, reduced to a mere shell. The Élysée Palace becomes a palace of empty signs, a sham of a democracy where only symbolic gestures circulate.

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Rentrée littéraire: contemporary French literature
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