Travel and revolution: Che Guevara in *Désérable* and Femen in *de Villeneuve*

François-Henri Désérable's "Chagrin d'un chant inachevé" and Camille de Villeneuve's "Lis Lénine!" (both Gallimard, 2025) appear to have little in common at first glance: one a travelogue following in Che Guevara's footsteps in South America, imbued with literary wit and a romantic sense of adventure; the other a relentless contemporary drama of war and the body, an apocalyptic panorama of activism, art, trauma, and war in Eastern Europe. Both novels grapple with central themes such as freedom, political utopias, and the failure of revolutions, but they unfold these themes in very different contexts. In both texts, travel is central, understood as an existential experience of pushing boundaries: François-Henri Désérable's narrator follows in the footsteps of the young Ernesto Guevara, before he became a revolutionary icon, exploring the ambivalent relationship between individual freedom and societal constraints. Camille de Villeneuve, on the other hand, tells of a journey back to the war, in which personal freedom becomes an illusion and political ideology, here in the form of feminist militancy and Soviet myths, appears as a destructive force.

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Rentrée littéraire: contemporary French literature
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