Surveillance and Exhaustion: Guillaume Poix after Michel Foucault
Guillaume Poix's novel "Perpétuité" (2025, shortlisted for the Prix Goncourt) expands the concept of life imprisonment beyond criminal law to an existential duration that encompasses not only inmates but also prison staff, trapped in a system of routine, trauma, and inescapable time. The warden Pierre hears the metallic clang of the gate in nightmares. The elderly gatekeeper Abraham spends his night shifts imprisoned in memories of his daughter's rape by former inmates, past and present merging in a tormenting, endless loop. Even prison director Bianca Mariani, though a "warrior" against overcrowding, is profoundly vulnerable due to her daughter's suicide attempt and the manipulative confrontation with the serial killer Duquesne. The prison, which the novel portrays as an overburdened and dysfunctional system where surveillance leads to a kaleidoscope of individual exhaustion and institutional decay, is interpreted in the essay as a diagnosis of society, presenting it as a focal point for an overburdened and structurally unjust late modernity. The essay particularly highlights how Poix updates and transcends Michel Foucault's conception of the disciplinary society by focusing on characters such as the psychologically damaged guards Houda and Maëva, or the guilt-ridden deputy Émilie Lavorel, all of whom demonstrate how the staff themselves become objects of power. The novel thus presents the prison not as a model of disciplinary power, but as a symbol of societal disintegration, the inability to resocialize, and the semi-privatized management of suffering, which traps all involved in a perpetual state of limbo.
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