The violated right: Nelly Alard
Nelly Alard's novel "La manif" (Gallimard, 2025), inspired by real events, illuminates the devastating effects of state violence and institutional injustice on a family. Alard's narrative style is decentralized, polyphonic, and characterized by an intimate closeness to her characters. It is a poetics of deceleration and psychological depth that contrasts the hardening of legal and political forces with the softness of subjectivity. The chapters jump between family members, creating a fragmented yet coherent narrative of familial pain. The novel shows how political injustice takes root in private lives, how the victim's body (Romain) becomes a silent archive of societal upheaval. The text's ethical and aesthetic commitment lies in this polyphony: it does not simply side with the indictment, but rather—through meticulous research, richly detailed medical and legal scenes, and psychologically credible inner worlds—creates a literary process of truth production. “La Manif” is not a treatise, but a process: literature as a hearing, as an investigation, as a form of procedure that treats justice as an open, yet-to-be-achieved ideal. [An article in the section “Creating Justice”.]
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