Diaspora and Nationalism: European Transitional Period 1913 by François Sureau
François Sureau's novel "Loin de Salonique" (Gallimard, 2026) is set in 1913 in Monastir (Bitola) and Thessaloniki, and unfolds a panorama of the politically overheated Balkans immediately before the First World War through a mysterious murder case: The unofficial investigations of the Frenchman Thomas More and the Jewish businessman Paul Seligmann lead through a web of diplomacy, trade and intelligence activities, revealing the tectonic tensions that were shaking the multi-ethnic Ottoman Empire; Thessaloniki appears as a Sephardic, multilingual diaspora city whose fragile plurality contrasts with the hardening nationalisms, while France is simultaneously portrayed as a universalist reference power and a power-political actor. The review argues that the criminal case forms a narrative surface for making a historical diagnosis: through the double coding of the character Thomas More – as an allusion to the humanist and author of "Utopia" and as a modern, disillusioned observer – the novel highlights the discrepancy between normative idea and political reality; methodically, the review develops its interpretation by first outlining the geopolitical liminal space, then analyzing the symbolism of the naming, elaborating on the representation of Jewish diaspora as a relational form of identity, and finally determining the genre-poetic mixture between detective novel, historical novel, and political essay, thus arriving at the judgment that the work offers less a criminal resolution than a melancholic meditation on the disintegration of a European model of order.
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