Mannerism as a symptom: Laurent Binet

Laurent Binet's "Perspective(s)" is a historical crime novel presented as a multi-perspective epistolary novel that delves into the aesthetic, political, and epistemological debates of 16th-century Italy, while simultaneously posing a profoundly modern question: How is truth constructed through the interplay of perspective, power, and medium? How can art—whether painted or narrated—be both sincere and effective? Perspective serves as an epistemological guide and stylistic organizing principle. It represents both the Renaissance's breakthrough in painting techniques and its Mannerist distortion and uncertainty, as well as Binet's narrative strategy, in which he acts as a "translator" of old letters, thereby exposing both historiography and fiction as narrative constructs.

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On the genre of the presidential novel

The interrelationship between political power and cultural-aesthetic, here fictional, representation in the form of praise of poets, patronage, copinage, or indeed a French presidential novel of recent terms and already for 2027 (in Houellebecq's latest novel "Anéantir") needs to be examined.

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Rentrée littéraire: contemporary French literature
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