War as a legacy: On the systematics of transgenerational imprinting in the work of Julia Weidmann

This review presents Julia Weidmann's study, "Continuum of Wars: Intergenerational Narratives of the World Wars in Contemporary French Literature" (Winter, 2025), as a fundamental, comparative investigation of a central phenomenon in contemporary French literature: the intergenerational narration of the World Wars. The starting point is the observation that subsequent generations—from the "wound" generation to the "inheritance" generation—reconstruct familial wartime experiences in literary form, mediating between archival research and imagination. To this end, Weidmann develops an original model of a "war continuum" that replaces traditional numerical generational categories with a metaphorical, trauma-oriented scale. She operationalizes this concept in a four-stage analytical method, which she applies to a broad corpus of authors (including Claude Simon, Patrick Modiano, Ivan Jablonka, and Anne Berest). The review particularly praises the methodological clarity, the nuanced close readings, and the identification of recurring narrative structures across generations, but also highlights limited weaknesses, such as a certain schematization in the comparative analysis and the relatively marginal treatment of aesthetic details. Overall, the study appears as a substantial contribution to literary memory studies, providing a viable set of tools for analyzing transgenerational memory and simultaneously opening up new perspectives for the exploration of future narrative forms.

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Naked Reality: On the new edition of early Claude Simon

Claude Simon's novel "La corde raide" (1947) is a mosaic of scenes, memories, and reflections, ranging from swimming in the sea with the young Véra to childhood recollections and wartime experiences, culminating in considerations of art theory. The "taut rope" in the title represents a delicate balance between vitality and awareness of death, between chaotic life experience and its artistic shaping. These early works by the author, reissued in 2025 by Éditions de Minuit in a volume together with "Le tricheur" (1945) and presented by Mireille Calle-Gruber, had long been out of print, as Simon had not desired their republication during his lifetime. Calle-Gruber interprets the texts as a poetics laboratory in which montage, fragmentation, the simultaneity of time, and the primacy of sensory perception over action are already discernible—techniques that would characterize his later work. The new edition fills a gap in the work's history by making this moment in its literary development accessible again (both texts are missing from the Pléiade edition). – The article interprets "La corde raide" as a non-linear narrative, an associative network of scenes and leitmotifs linked by semantic fields such as water, light, vegetation, body, and movement. War experiences are not depicted heroically, but as a chaotic, bodily-sensory reality; childhood scenes serve as a base layer of perception and a foil for contrast to the existential present. The tension between appearance and reality is central: Simon criticizes "falsification" in art and society and seeks a naked, unvarnished truth, with Cézanne serving as a positive counter-model to academic painting. Architecture, color, and lighting are employed, as in painting, to structure memory and perception. Overall, “La corde raide” is understood as an early, but already consistent, exploration of a poetics that balances perception, memory and form on a “tightrope” between chaos and structure.

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Rentrée littéraire: contemporary French literature
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