Oedipus in Évreux: A German-French post-war tragedy by Denis Dercourt
Denis Dercourt's debut novel, "Évreux" (Denoël, 2023), tells a consequential family saga spanning seven decades, beginning amidst the bombing raids of 1944. Léon, born to an abused French woman and a German collaborator, grows up in an atmosphere of shame, silence, and moral coldness. The child of the ruins becomes a ruthless power broker who systematically exploits the guilt of his fellow citizens for blackmail, building an empire in the process. In parallel, the novel follows the fates of his estranged children and the historian Antoine, who attempts to uncover the hidden crimes of the past—and in doing so, becomes entangled in a deadly spiral of revenge and vigilante justice. The city of Évreux emerges as a morally contaminated space where the history of the Franco-German occupation is not overcome but rather perpetuated through personal narratives. The review consistently interprets the novel as a modern tragedy in the vein of Oedipus Rex, arguing that Dercourt is less concerned with presenting a historical chronicle than with developing a deterministic model of guilt. Central to this is the thesis of an "economy of guilt": transgressions are not atoned for, but rather instrumentalized and transferred into new power relations. Stylistically, the review supports this interpretation by pointing to the paratactic, protocol-like narrative style, which de-emotionalizes violence and presents it as a logical consequence of historical entanglements. Furthermore, it highlights that the figure of the historian embodies the ambivalence of enlightenment: knowledge does not lead to catharsis, but rather to renewed action. The review's argument is clearly structured—from the primal scene in 1944 through intergenerational repetition to the final act of vigilante justice—and aims to diagnose a postwar society whose official narratives of reconciliation are radically undermined by private histories of violence.
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