The Republic works: François Bégaudeau
François Bégaudeau's "Désertion" (2026) tells the story of the quiet but irreversible erosion of Steve's life, a young man from the Normandy countryside. Raised in a stable family, shaped by school, media consumption, and pop-cultural obsessions, he gradually drifts away from all social ties. Minor slights, linguistic invisibility, and institutional indifference accumulate over the years until he finally goes to Syria and joins the Kurdish YPG. The novel deliberately avoids dramatic turning points or psychological explanations, portraying Steve's path not as a logical consequence of radicalization, but as a structural consequence of a life that is no longer seen or addressed anywhere. Desertion is depicted here less as a rupture and more as a progressive process of societal blind spots. The review argues that Bégaudeau subverts expectations of a linear, politically causal narrative. The novel unfolds a poetics of displacement, parallelism, and affective subjectivity, in which small everyday events, school, family, and media form the framework for Steve's life. The Syria section sabotages the expected radicalization: instead of ideological seduction, there are conversations, everyday life, and contradictory discourses. This structure allows "Désertion" to be read as a literary representation of an "anarchic" refusal of meaning, in which the formal functionality of social institutions exposes the existential voids that make Steve's disappearance possible in the first place.
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