The reparative turn: why literature today should do more than tell stories

This review presents Alexandre Gefen's essay "Réparer le monde: la littérature française face au XXIe siècle" (2017, English translation 2024) as an ambitious yet symptomatic diagnosis of contemporary literature: The aesthetic autonomy of the 20th century is replaced by a "reparative" paradigm in which literature is understood as a therapeutic, social, and ethical practice. Using a deliberately open corpus—ranging from Annie Ernaux to clinical case reports—Gefen maps a literature that forges identity, processes trauma, cultivates empathy, and safeguards collective memory; drawing on thinkers such as Paul Ricœur and care ethics, he describes storytelling as a technology of the self and an instrument of symbolic reparation. The review succinctly highlights this central thesis, acknowledging the analytical breadth and theoretical eclecticism, but simultaneously problematizing the normative narrowness: by reading literature primarily as a "cure," Gefen risks obscuring its inherent aesthetic logic in favor of an ethical utilitarianism. Thus, the book itself appears as an exemplary expression of the very tendency it describes—a committed, impact-oriented literary theory that oscillates between diagnosis and programmatic statement.

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Silence after the storm: Cécile Guilbert

In earlier works such as the novel *Les Républicains* (2017) and the chronicle collection *Roue libre* (2020), Cécile Guilbert established herself as an astute diagnostician of the political, intellectual, and stylistic decline of France and its society. Her most recent book, *Feux sacrés* (2025), however, represents a remarkable shift, turning to an autobiographical and spiritual self-reflection triggered by personal loss and a search for meaning in Indian philosophy. This essay explores how this turn to a “radical inwardness” in *Feux sacrés* can be understood not as resignation, but as a continued, albeit different, form of resistance to the diagnosed signs of decadence in the modern world.

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Technical note for the writing machine: Sigolène Vinson

"Les Jouisseurs" (2017) tells the story of Olivier, an author suffering from writer's block, who steals an automaton called "L'Écrivain" to write his novel, while his partner, Éléonore, uses psychotropic drugs and, in her hallucinations, also uses the automaton to imagine the story of Ole and Léonie. Parallel to this unfolds the narrative of Ole and Léonie, a couple of smugglers in early 20th-century Morocco, who also attempt to escape their melancholy through their "Caravane de débauche" (dive caravan). The novel explores, across eras and places, the central question of whether intense sensual pleasure ("jouissance") can offer an escape from the brutality of earthly existence and lead to true joy in life.

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Planned obsolescence: Guillaume Poix

In his novel "Les fils conducteurs" (2017), winner of the Prix Wepler-Fondation La Poste, Guillaume Poix confronts us with the contradictions of Western idealism, the devastating consequences of global consumerism, and the moral corruption that arises when well-intentioned actions collide with the complex realities of exploitation. The novel, which plunges us into the dangerous world of the Agbogbloshie e-waste dump in Ghana, tells the parallel stories of the French-Swiss photojournalist Thomas and the young Ghanaian boy Jacob. The central theme of the novel is the dismantling of Western arrogance and naiveté, embodied in the character of Thomas. Driven by his idealism and desire for relevance, the photographer Thomas wants to expose the ecological catastrophe and illegal recycling practices in Agbogbloshie. But his journey becomes a moral descent that makes him complicit in a tragedy. The narrative problematizes how the Western gaze, which oscillates between documentation and voyeurism, ultimately contributes to complicity.

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Epistolary novel in the digital realm: Sandra Lucbert

Sandra Lucbert's novel "La Toile" (translated as "The Net") is a reflection on literature in the age of digital communication and artificial intelligence. Through its specific form and the complex interweaving of technology, power, relationships, and identity, the text illuminates fundamental questions of authorship and authenticity in an increasingly networked world. The book jacket of Sandra Lucbert's novel "La Toile" alludes to "Les Liaisons dangereuses," the canonical epistolary novel by Choderlos de Laclos from the 18th century. This comparison proves fruitful for interpretation, as it characterizes "La Toile" as a transformation of the epistolary novel into the digital age, transferring the classic themes of power, manipulation, and vulnerability into the context of networked communication.

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Just declared a state of emergency and a curfew

[On the occasion of the Paris summer riots of 2023]

Without sleeping and definitely being able to read the reportages of the Algerian national television, I am looking for new French news across the Canary Islands and neigeux d'un mauvais téléviseur. This can be used to identify the silhouette of the family of the presenter of the daily journal. J'étais curieux de savoir comment la mort de Machelin allait être traitée.

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This article is written in German and can be found at https://rentree.de. Automatic translations into English and French are available. English, French.

Rentrée littéraire: contemporary French literature
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