A luminous post-apocalypse: Céline Minard

Céline Minard's novel "Tovaangar" (Rivages, 2025) envisions a radically different post-apocalypse: not scarcity, violence, and survival define the world after the end of human civilization, but rather emergence, cooperation, and a vibrant diversity of relationships between all species. On the ruins of present-day Los Angeles—now reverting to its pre-colonial name, Tovaangar—a stable, polyphonic world order has developed long after the collapse, in which humans, animals, plants, stones, and conscious technological beings coexist as "relatives." The protagonist Amaryllis's expedition leads not through a landscape of devastation, but through a functioning ecosystem where conflicts do not escalate but are ritually negotiated. Compared to Minard's earlier novels—"Le Dernier Monde" (isolation after the disappearance of humanity), "Le Grand Jeu" (stoic self-sufficiency within a technological framework), and "Plasmas" (cosmic fragmentation of being)—"Tovaangar" marks the endpoint of a poetic movement: from the isolation of humankind to a radical decentering in favor of a hybrid, posthuman collective. This essay develops its argument from genre comparison to poetics: First, it distinguishes "Tovaangar" from the classic, affect-driven post-apocalypse and shows how Minard systematically replaces fear, guilt, and nostalgia with curiosity and attentiveness. Building on this, the novel is read as a space for thought that does not merely illustrate current discourses on the Anthropocene, posthumanism, and new materialism, but rather transforms them. In a comparative analysis of her works, this shift is identified as a long-term development in Minard's writing: from melancholic emptiness ("Le Dernier Monde") through technological refuges ("Le Grand Jeu") and cosmic dissolution ("Plasmas") to a "workshop of the real" that actively reassembles the world. The conclusion sharpens this interpretation: Tovaangar is less a warning than a challenge—a novel that shows that the future does not necessarily arise from the fear of catastrophe, but from the imagination of other, non-anthropocentric forms of coexistence. In doing so, Minard not only shifts a genre, but also re-examines the question of the political and ontological possibility of literature itself.

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Starry sky over Rome: Renaud Rodier

Against the backdrop of a politically decaying Rome on the night of Giorgia Meloni's election, Renaud Rodier's third book, "Si Rome meurt" (Anne Carrière, 2025), follows aspiring filmmaker Pietro as he embarks on an obsessive search for his missing father, whom he believes he has rediscovered in the form of a prophetic homeless man on the margins of society. Guided by the astrophysical theory of the holographic universe, Pietro designs his central film project as a process of cinematic writing, attempting to transform Rome's urban entropy into a coherent aesthetic construct using grainy Super 8 footage. Renaud Rodier's novel unfolds as an intermedial palimpsest, exploring the existential question of what can be saved if Rome dies, through a dense interweaving of traumatic memory and cinematic vision. By elevating astrophysical metaphor to space poetry, the novel transforms the social entropy of Rome into a transcendent, astronomical topography that relocates the discourse on the "Eternal City" as an indestructible information code beyond temporal decay.

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Transgression in Guillaume Lebrun: Joan of Arc and Héliogabalus

Guillaume Lebrun's novels "Fantaisies guérillères" (2022) and "Ravagés de splendeur" (2025) present history as a product of fiction, power, and staging. This article analyzes how Lebrun recodes Joan of Arc into a feminist media figure and stylizes the Roman emperor Héliogabale as a transgender mystic of decadence. The Middle Ages and Roman antiquity serve as an aesthetic and ideological space for exploring questions of identity and fiction: In "Fantaisies guérillères," Joan is invented by a clique of women and strategically staged as a symbol of female counter-power. In "Ravagés de splendeur," the transgression, alluding to Antonin Artaud's "Héliogabale," leads to a brutal death, a death that marks the incompatibility of Héliogabale's existence with an order that must eradicate the Other. Lebrun understands literature as an affect machine and disruptive force – his language does not aim to depict, but to destabilize and liberate, in these queer, mythopoetic transgressions.

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Rentrée littéraire: contemporary French literature
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