The Unreachable City: Sanctity, History, and Violence in the French Jerusalem Novel

What place does Jerusalem occupy in contemporary French literature—and what does this place reveal about literature itself? This essay examines eleven novels and short stories, ranging from André Schwarz-Bart to Nathan Devers, from Valérie Zenatti to Justine Augier, from Élie Wiesel to Mathias Énard, and demonstrates that Jerusalem is never merely a backdrop in these works, but rather a structuring principle: a city that disorients the characters, brings repressed memories back to the surface, imposes affiliations, and shatters established forms. Three functional types emerge from the comparison—Jerusalem as an eschatological space, as a political focal point, and as an existential mirror—which are distributed and overlap throughout the texts without ever converging. A specifically French perspective proves constitutive: Republican secularism, the legacy of the Enlightenment, the experience of the Shoah as part of its own history—all of this colors the perception of a city equally sacred to Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, and whose threefold sanctity has for centuries produced wars as well as longings. Arab and Muslim authors such as Karim Kattan, Amin Maalouf, and Adania Shibli add their own distinctive emphasis, describing Jerusalem not as the destination of a long-held yearning, but as the starting point of forced exile—and using French as a strategically chosen medium to inscribe Palestinian concepts and experiences into a Western discourse that otherwise does not recognize them. What unites the works examined, beyond all differences, is the awareness that Jerusalem eludes the sovereign narrative gaze: None of these texts triumphs over its subject; all bear the marks of the place where they have failed.

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Death of the Sun: Nathan Devers

Nathan Devers' novel "Surchauffe" (2025) unfolds a bleak panorama of overload: The protagonist, Jade Elmire-Fasquin, a manager on the verge of burnout, is caught between corrupt power games, a toxic marriage, and her own yearning for an "absolute elsewhere." The plot spirals from private exhaustion through global power conflicts to the cosmic dimension, where the overheating of body, society, and universe converges. Metaphors such as sun, fire, spiral, and island intertwine personal disintegration with ecological, political, and cultural self-destruction. In the end, Jade's attempt to escape the spiral culminates in the genocide of the Sentinelles—a bitter twist that shows that even the "other" is not untouched. The essay begins by emphasizing that Devers places the "death of the sun" as a cosmic certainty at the outset in order to expose the fragility of all morality. The metaphor of overheating intertwines intimate, social, and planetary crises into a poetics of apocalypse, in which morality and commitment are revealed as fleeting, often narcissistic gestures. The ending is particularly highlighted: Jade profits from her tragic act, the violence is exploited for economic gain, and the island transforms into a "new Babylon." The review interprets "Surchauffe" as a diagnosis of a world that no longer cools down but instead consumes itself in its own spiral of overheating.

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Rentrée littéraire: contemporary French literature
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