Autosociobiography as a French genre

Autosociobiography: Poetics and Politics, edited by Eva Blome, Philipp Lammers and Sarah Seidel, Treatises on Literary Studies, Metzler, 2022.

The edited volume “Autosociobiography: Poetics and Politics”, edited by Eva Blome, Philipp Lammers and Sarah Seidel, is dedicated to the study of a literary text form that has existed since Didier Eribon's Return to Reims (Return to ReimsThe genre of autosociobiographical writing (2009/2016) has experienced a remarkable resurgence. The editors aim to examine, systematize, and reflect upon this "still young genre" in order to establish it as a relevant object of literary studies and to investigate its literary form (poetics) within the context of its political and socio-analytical claims. The contributions discuss current autosociobiographical texts and their literary-historical contexts under the three main themes of "Literary Epistemology of the Social," "On the Political Nature of Form," and "Transition and Narration."

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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.

Childhood and Self-Transformation: Edouard Louis and Didier Eribon

In "Changer: méthode" (Seuil, 2021), Edouard Louis presents childhood as the fundamental origin of pain, exclusion, and the unstoppable urge to escape. Experiences of poverty, the harshness of the social environment, and especially the constant humiliation and slander due to perceived femininity and homosexuality inflict a deep wound on the narrator and an awareness of a predetermined fate to be avoided. This existential compulsion to flee becomes the driving force behind a lifelong and radical self-transformation, understood not as natural development but as conscious, disciplined, and methodical "work" on one's own body and being, often learned through role-playing and imitation. Childhood not only provides the motivation for change but also—through early survival strategies—the initial steps toward this "method," while later childhood and adolescent encounters (e.g., with librarians and Elena) serve as catalysts and precursors for the break with the world of origin. Even in adulthood, childhood remains a constant, often painful reference point, driving the ongoing need for change and shaping the struggle for identity and belonging.

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Rentrée littéraire: contemporary French literature
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