New phase of French memoir literature: Matthieu Niango and Benny Malapa

“Le Fardeau” by Matthieu Niango and “Un nègre qui parle yiddish” by Benny Malapa (both 2025) portray two family histories in which the 20th century is revealed as a genealogical upheaval. Niango’s novel follows a son’s archival research, uncovering his mother’s Lebensborn origins and the paradoxical legacy of Jewish victimhood and Nazi persecution. Malapa’s sweeping family epic tells the love story and survival tale of a Cameroonian-German man and a Polish-Jewish woman, refuting any myth of ethnic purity. Both books demonstrate how colonialism, racism, and antisemitism intertwine and how hybridity becomes the antithesis of totalitarian ideologies. With their differing aesthetics—documentary-analytical in Niango's work, oral-epic in Malapa's—they demonstrate that identity is an open process of memory: a web of ruptures, transmission, and responsibility. The review argues that both novels mark a new phase in French memory literature, in which national history is no longer explored through grand collective narratives, but rather through intimate family archives, minority biographies, and transgenerational traumas. It reads the two works as counter-narratives to identity-based, ethnonational interpretations of "French" origin. Niango and Malapa uncover genealogical assemblages that conceive of Europe's history of violence relationally. The novel forms model two ethics of remembering: responsibility through analysis (Niango) and responsibility through transmission (Malapa).

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Rentrée littéraire: contemporary French literature
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