Three Last People: Education After Civilization by Sacha Bertrand
Sacha Bertrand's novel "11:02h, le vent se lève" paints a picture of a world where civilization lies buried like a "suffocated carcass" beneath the toxic fog of the Amer River. Amidst an unforgiving mountain range, isolated as a "gigantic island" of jagged rocks, the former librarian Myriam leads a life of absolute stasis, symbolized by a clock permanently set to 11:02. This solitude ends when she captures Jonas, an "earthly" being of pure instinct, whom she attempts to mold in her own image through violence and language, hoping to quell the beast within. However, the painstakingly constructed security of her "ordered garden" clashes with the arrival of a stranger, whose violent death opens Jonas's eyes to Myriam's paranoid need for control and ultimately drives him to flee to an uncharted "elsewhere." The review argues that Bertrand's debut novel transcends the boundaries of classical dystopia by locating the horror not in a totalitarian system, but in the "disappearance of shared horizons of meaning." The text is interpreted as a critical variation on the Robinsonade, in which technical skill and discipline lead not to freedom, but to an oppressive power structure of dependency and psychological confinement. A key argument of the analysis concerns the landscape, which functions not as a romantic backdrop, but as a "resistant force" that denies humanity any metaphysical interpretation and throws it back upon its naked physicality. Ultimately, the critique demonstrates that humanity in this world can only be preserved through an "ethic without hope."
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