After the end: France without a future according to Jean Rolin
Jean Rolin's novel "Les événements" (2015) paints a picture of a France in which the state order has collapsed without being replaced by a new one. In a series of journeys, observations, and episodic encounters, the narrator traverses a country marked by armed groups, makeshift checkpoints, and destroyed infrastructure. The civil war remains strangely unspectacular: violence is omnipresent but rarely eruptive; it manifests itself in blocked streets, deserted buildings, and a permanent insecurity that structures everyday life. Rolin avoids a clear temporal setting or an explanatory political backstory. Instead, a panorama of the present emerges as a permanent state of emergency, in which former state structures persist only as ruins or empty gestures. This review argues that "Les événements" should be read less as a classic dystopia than as "documentary dystopianism." It shows how Rolin, with a sober, precisely observant language, allows the catastrophic to seep into everyday life, thereby creating a new form of political literature that manages without totalitarian visions of the future. The analysis focuses particularly on the topography of decay, the micropolitics of violence, the disrupted forms of communication, and the novel's open ending, which rejects any fantasy of redemption or reconstruction. The review understands Rolin's text as a literary diagnosis of a present in which the end is not imminent, but has already occurred.
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