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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Non serviam. Political Literature Today: Alexandre Gefen

In his book "La littérature est une affaire politique" ("Literature is a Political Affair"), Alexandre Gefen aims to demonstrate that literature—contrary to the common assumption that it merely serves entertainment—is fundamentally a political matter. A central concern of Gefen's is to highlight that contemporary French writers, while rejecting the classical notion of "committed literature," are by no means aesthetically indifferent to their country's political problems. Rather, these authors frequently use their narratives as tools for analyzing inequalities. They employ elements of autobiography or reportage to question social discourses and sometimes even attempt to prolong or anticipate societal crises. In doing so, they reject the idea of ​​an "ivory tower" into which they are supposedly confined and which they can no longer tolerate. They fulfill social demands by participating in literary residencies, for example, in communities, hospitals, retirement homes, or with young people and migrants. The book thus reveals an impressive panorama of a "combative and modern literature that seeks to transform our society."

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Rentrée littéraire: contemporary French literature
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