François Mitterrand between myth and criticism: Annie Ernaux
This essay examines the portrayal of François Mitterrand in Annie Ernaux's "Les années" (2008) in comparison to Mitterrand's political polemic against de Gaulle, "Le Coup d'État permanent" (1964). The central question is how both texts—despite their different genres as an autobiographical memoir and a political pamphlet—reveal the same structural feature of the Fifth Republic: the concentration of political hopes, fears, and notions of legitimacy on a single charismatic figure. While Mitterrand, in his critique of Charles de Gaulle, denounces the dangers of a personalized presidential system, Ernaux, from the perspective of a collective "on," describes the enthusiasm, expectations, and subsequent disillusionment that accompanied his own presidency. Using key passages from "Les années," the study demonstrates how Mitterrand evolved from a symbolic figure of the political awakening of 1981, through the disillusionment of the "rigueur" years, to an embodiment of age, transience, and historical memory. The comparison makes it clear that Ernaux not only recounts the emotional history of the French left but also exposes the paradoxical workings of a political system that transforms even its critics into monarchical messianic figures.
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