Guilt, Shame, Freedom: Marie-Ève Lacasse
Marie-Ève Lacasse's novel "La vie des gens libres" (Seuil, 2025) is a quiet yet highly complex narrative work about the afterlife of guilt, the experience of stigmatization, and the struggle for a new self-image. At its heart are two women: Clémence Thévenin—formerly Clémence Robert, a doctor, criminal, and prisoner—and Laura Rolin, a single mother and physician in a precarious transition. The two are not directly connected, either biographically or socially, yet through subtle narrative parallels and symbolic reflections, Lacasse presents a kind of dual female biography that coalesces into a collective reflection on the possibility of female freedom. The novel is many things at once: a social critique of class relations, a psychological chamber drama about guilt and loneliness, and a poetic mosaic of inner monologues and concrete observations. In its deeper political structure, "La vie des gens libres" can also be read as a critical examination of the French justice and healthcare systems. Questions of social participation, solidarity among women, and the symbolic order of purity and blemish take center stage. What does it mean to be "free"—and who belongs to "vie des gens libres"?
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