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.
➙ To the article