Negative Identity: Problematizing French-Jewish Literature in the Work of Bernard Vorms
Bernard Vorms' novel "Pas gentil" (cited as PG) unfolds, in essayistic form, the self-examination of an assimilated French-Jewish intellectual who, faced with age, origin, and societal ascription, is forced to grapple with an identity he can neither positively define nor completely shed. Starting with a banal everyday scene—a letter regarding funeral arrangements—a multifaceted text of reflection develops, intertwining autobiographical memories, family history, political analysis, and literary intertexts. The narrator traces the paths of Jewish existence between assimilation and exclusion, analyzes the persistence of antisemitic stereotypes, and formulates a central insight with the "axiom of absolute otherness": Jewishness is neither fully comprehensible to non-Jews nor to Jews themselves. The essay argues that the text unfolds its literary and theoretical radicalism precisely in this way: PG is not to be read as a contribution to an existing “French-Jewish literature,” but rather as a problematization of it. By consistently defining Vorm’s identity negatively—as something that reveals itself only in its indeterminacy—he develops a poetics of “negative identity” characterized by irony (for example, in the “shm” prefix), essayistic openness, and intertextual polyphony. The novel eschews classical plot and heroic narratives in favor of a thought process that culminates in a sober, unconciliatory, yet dignified conclusion: a self-reflective acceptance of one’s own belonging without illusions about its content. The interpretation simultaneously reads this approach as a plea for the essay as an adequate form of modern identity reflection—tentative, contradictory, and without claiming to definitive answers.
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