Postcolonial picaronovel: Zied Bakir
“La naturalisation” is a novel about the act of naturalization, which for the narrator does not signify entry into the French national community; rather, it exposes its grotesque facade. Elyas Z'Beybi, the first-person narrator, recounts his journey from a Tunisian village to Paris in a dense, epically expansive, and satirically serious tone, describing his childhood in the shadow of Bourguiba's authoritarian regime, his failed educational endeavors, sexual frustration, his attempt to become a poet, and his gradual descent into precarity. This article interprets the text as a story of failed acculturation and as a reactivation and transformation of a literary model: that of the picaro, the disillusioned narrator from below who navigates a fragmented world without ever truly feeling at home. The picaro has proven remarkably relevant to postcolonial, migrant narratives. “La naturalisation” combines the elements of this model with a radical analysis of the present: The modern picaro carries a smartphone in his pocket and yet recites Victor Hugo. Instead of being accepted into French society, the narrator repeatedly experiences exclusion, alienation, and symbolic humiliation. His narrative is neither a classic success story nor a linear educational narrative. Rather, it follows the detours, leaps, and circumstances of a postcolonial rogue, a picaro in a migration society.
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