Transgression in Guillaume Lebrun: Joan of Arc and Héliogabalus
Guillaume Lebrun's novels "Fantaisies guérillères" (2022) and "Ravagés de splendeur" (2025) present history as a product of fiction, power, and staging. This article analyzes how Lebrun recodes Joan of Arc into a feminist media figure and stylizes the Roman emperor Héliogabale as a transgender mystic of decadence. The Middle Ages and Roman antiquity serve as an aesthetic and ideological space for exploring questions of identity and fiction: In "Fantaisies guérillères," Joan is invented by a clique of women and strategically staged as a symbol of female counter-power. In "Ravagés de splendeur," the transgression, alluding to Antonin Artaud's "Héliogabale," leads to a brutal death, a death that marks the incompatibility of Héliogabale's existence with an order that must eradicate the Other. Lebrun understands literature as an affect machine and disruptive force – his language does not aim to depict, but to destabilize and liberate, in these queer, mythopoetic transgressions.
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