The Color Black: Justine Bo

Justine Bo's novel "Eve Melville, Cantique" (Grasset, 2024) delves deep into the traumas of American history, illuminating how old wounds resurface in the present. The drama begins with a seemingly mundane act of vandalism: the facade of Eve Melville's neighbor's house in Brooklyn is painted black overnight. But this external "defacement" becomes a painful trigger for Eve, whose family has been closely connected to this house and its surroundings for generations. It reopens a wound within her, leading her back to her family's origins, inextricably linked to slavery in the Southern states. The house, once acquired by her great-grandfather Solomon Melville as a bastion of freedom and property, becomes a focal point where America's past and present collide in all their brutality. "Cantique" is an allusion to the biblical Song of Songs—a poetic yet rebellious image. This motif led her to a novel that brings together the memory of slavery, gentrification, AIDS, Black history and urban violence in New York – starting from the dramatic metaphor of a house painted black at night as an attack on identity and ownership.

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Rentrée littéraire: contemporary French literature
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