Starry sky over Rome: Renaud Rodier
Against the backdrop of a politically decaying Rome on the night of Giorgia Meloni's election, Renaud Rodier's third book, "Si Rome meurt" (Anne Carrière, 2025), follows aspiring filmmaker Pietro as he embarks on an obsessive search for his missing father, whom he believes he has rediscovered in the form of a prophetic homeless man on the margins of society. Guided by the astrophysical theory of the holographic universe, Pietro designs his central film project as a process of cinematic writing, attempting to transform Rome's urban entropy into a coherent aesthetic construct using grainy Super 8 footage. Renaud Rodier's novel unfolds as an intermedial palimpsest, exploring the existential question of what can be saved if Rome dies, through a dense interweaving of traumatic memory and cinematic vision. By elevating astrophysical metaphor to space poetry, the novel transforms the social entropy of Rome into a transcendent, astronomical topography that relocates the discourse on the "Eternal City" as an indestructible information code beyond temporal decay.
➙ To the article