Writing against the death of her lover: Céline Zufferey

Céline Zufferey's novel "Maxence" (Gallimard, 2026) is a fragmentarily composed writing project born from the anticipated grief for a lover, defying any conventional love narrative. In loosely connected chapters—lists, miniatures, observations, reflections—a portrait of a man emerges that is simultaneously a love story, a memory experiment, and a poetics-based self-examination, driven by the central tension between the desire to capture the ephemeral and the realization of the fundamental inadequacy of linguistic fixation. The narrator writes against the future loss by meticulously registering Maxence's body, voice, gestures, and everyday practices, while increasingly reflecting that every description remains reductive and transforms the living into a potential "tombeau." The interpretation reveals that this very insight into one's own failure becomes an aesthetic principle: the fragmentary form, the rhapsodic temporal structure, and the shifting address (between third person and intimate "you" to both the living and the anticipated dead Maxence) are not merely stylistic devices, but rather necessary responses to the text's ethical and epistemological dilemma. By systematically uncovering the four axes of reading—love narrative, critique of knowledge, autopoiesis, and reflection on time—and simultaneously uniting the semantic fields of body, archive, and prolepsis, the review reveals a poetics of pre-mourning in the novel, in which death does not appear as an event, but as a permanent inscription into the present, leading to an intensification of the everyday: the writing, intended to banish loss, thus itself becomes a medium of heightened presence, without ever resolving the fundamental contradiction between life and recording.

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Repairing time with the materials of time

Alice Guy, The Results of Feminism (1906)

During her research, Constance discovers that the destination of the Alice Guy film is not an exception. At this time the two tiers of the film's films premiered in cinemas on the screen. The nitrates of cellulose are highly inflammable and the gases that destroy the explosives. Plus a pellicule vieillit and s'endommage, plus the température d'autocombustion low. « Films flammes », des désastres en puissance. Leur conservation is delicate mais qu'importe, il n'était pas question de les épargner à l'époque. Les films étaient avant tout des produits de consumption ; The public has a new lease of life, recycles the silver and cellulose for the production of other films, and destroys the pellicles for the liberation of the place.

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This article is written in German and can be found at https://rentree.de. Automatic translations into English and French are available. English, French.

Rentrée littéraire: contemporary French literature
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