The end of the Gulag, without redemption: Antoine Sénanque

This review interprets Antoine Sénanque's "Adieu Kolyma" (2025) as a radically disillusioning novel of post-history, which understands the end of Stalinism not as a historical rupture, but as the continuity of a system of violence. The starting point is the thesis that the logic of the Gulag—paradigmatically embodied by the landscape of the Kolyma River as its most extreme location—extends temporally, spatially, and socially: into post-revolutionary Budapest of 1957, into criminal clan structures, and into the affective dispositions of the survivors. The Hungarian Revolution appears not as an event of liberation, but as a bloody episode without consequences; history merely serves as "decor" for private revenge, loyalty, and betrayal. Central to the analysis is a "poetics of cold," in which emotions appear dangerous and dysfunctional, and in which the permafrost of the Kolyma preserves guilt, violence, and memory instead of dissolving them. Characters like Pal and Lazar Vadas or Sylla Bach embody different modes of this post-totalitarian existence: instrumentalized violence, emptied emotions, and a bodily memory that undermines any moral meaning. The review programmatically positions the novel on Varlam Shalamov's side against any narrative of redemption à la Solzhenitsyn and emphasizes the consistent demythologization of suffering, survival, and freedom. "Adieu Kolyma" thus appears as a text of radical immanence, demonstrating that totalitarianism does not end but merely changes its bearers—and that the time that follows remains a time without a future horizon.

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Rentrée littéraire: contemporary French literature
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