Abyss and illusion: Hell as the emptiness of global modernity in the work of Jérôme Ferrari

Jérôme Ferrari's new novel, "Très brève théorie de l'enfer" (Actes Sud, 2026), presents a dark parable about the metaphysical state of globalized modernity. At its center is a Corsican philosophy teacher who flees the moral monotony of his homeland and, after a stopover in Algeria, arrives in Abu Dhabi, where he lives as a privileged expatriate while invisible migrant workers construct the glittering city. A narrator, speaking within the narrative framework to the "King of Time," unfolds a "theory of hell" according to which damnation arises not from spectacular crimes, but from the "dryness of the heart" and a culpable blindness to the truth. The protagonist's and narrator's retrospective account of the embedded story provides a concrete case study: his attempts to become someone else through escape and religious metamorphosis fail; His wife and daughter disappear, and his return to Corsica proves to be the final exile of a man who, as a “double apostate,” regains neither homeland nor identity. – The essay reads the novel as the second part of a trilogy on the dialectic of “indigenous” and “travelers,” in which Ferrari analyzes the encounter between mobility, power, and moral blindness. By intertwining the metaphysical framing narrative with the social topography of Abu Dhabi—the artificial Corniche, the Mussafah industrial zone, the Louvre construction sites—hell appears not as an otherworldly place, but as a structure of the present: a state of ontological indifference in which privileged travelers conceal their own emptiness through movement, role-playing, and cultural masks. The journey thus becomes the paradoxical engine of a spiritual descent. Ultimately, there is the realization that in the globalized world, every escape to an “elsewhere” remains merely a variation on the same deception—an endless cycle of exile, guilt, and failed metamorphosis.

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Travelers' Misfortune: Jérôme Ferrari

Goncourt Prize winner Jérôme Ferrari launched a trilogy in 2024 with "Nord Sentinelle," exploring the encounter with otherness. This Corsican novel about the Romani family focuses on a murder, but also serves as a juxtaposition of a traditional, archaic island world with a landscape and society ruined by overtourism.

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Rentrée littéraire: contemporary French literature
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