Isis in Montmartre: Gérard de Nerval as patient and prophet in Diane Morel's film
Diane Morel's "Le Mystère Nerval" (Fayard, 2024) begins in 1841: Gérard de Nerval is admitted to Dr. Blanche's clinic, covered in blood and obsessed with the idea that an "Isis" is dead. From this scene unfolds a multifaceted narrative that intertwines criminal intrigue and a portrait of the poet. The young physician Émile Blanche investigates in literary Paris, among Gautier, Houssaye, and the radical Petrus Borel, stumbling upon the murdered journalist Flore—and a political conspiracy against the July Monarchy. But the true dynamic lies deeper: Morel integrates Nerval's motifs—the "black sun of melancholy" from the sonnet "El Desdichado," the doppelgänger motif from "Aurélia," the Valois landscapes from "Sylvie," the Egyptian Isis as a cipher for the "eternal feminine"—into the structure of the plot. The chaotic writing process, visualized as a tapestry of hundreds of scraps of paper, becomes a poetics program: fragment, dream, and vision are not symptoms, but forms of knowledge. Even the therapeutic scene in which Nerval's own translation of "Faust" releases him from catatonia stages literature as a counterforce to clinical rationality. – The review reads this novel not only as a historical crime story, but also as a poetic experiment: Morel defends Nerval's "madness" against the grasp of positivism by taking its inner logic seriously. The crime plot of this biofictional work reflects Nerval's obsession with "morte amoureuse" (lovesick death); Flore becomes the earthly manifestation of that Isis who, in Nerval's work, is simultaneously mother goddess, lover, and lost unity. Dream and reality permeate one another until, in the end, in the ruins of Chaalis—a topos from "Sylvie"—the real dead woman and the mythical Lorelei merge into one another. This creates the image of a poet whose inner turmoil is not pathologized but understood as aesthetic radicalism. In this reading, Morel's novel appears as a plea for a poetics of the unstable: against the "order" of the clinic, he sets the productive disorder of the imagination – and makes Nerval's statement about dreams as a "second life" the narrative principle.
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