Exposed body and melancholy of the trail: Joy Majdalani and Robert Mapplethorpe

This review interprets Joy Majdalani's novel "Le goût des garçons" (2021) and essay "Jimmy Freeman" (2025) as two complementary stages in a consistent literary project. The novel "Le goût des garçons" is a subjective exploration of female desire, shaped by the tension between religious upbringing, guilt, and self-empowerment. Male figures appear less as psychologically developed characters than as projection surfaces on which power, fantasy, and transgression can be tested. "Jimmy Freeman" takes these themes further, shifting them from the narrative risk of the novel to a poetic-essayistic reflection: Starting with Robert Mapplethorpe's photograph of Jimmy Freeman, Majdalani explores desire, objectification, and the violence of form from an art-theoretical and existential perspective. The essay functions as a condensation and commentary on the novel, in which autobiographical experience, aesthetic analysis, and ethical self-examination overlap. Central to this article is the homoerotic art of Robert Mapplethorpe, whose work is interpreted as a hinge between classical beauty and radical body politics, as a perfectly formed, disciplined object of desire. At the same time, the analysis reveals that this aesthetic objectification of the body is always accompanied by a melancholy of trace, for photography preserves only the imprint of a living, mortal body. In the tension between formal eternity and physical transience, Mapplethorpe's work unfolds a desire that is as monumental as it is profoundly vulnerable. His photographs represent an art that simultaneously canonizes and exposes the male—especially the Black—body, thereby making questions of power, the gaze, and subjugation unavoidable. This tension is overshadowed by the knowledge of AIDS and the early deaths of Mapplethorpe and many of his models, giving the images, in retrospect, the character of a final flicker—immortalized in beauty, mortal, and irretrievable.

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Rentrée littéraire: contemporary French literature
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