Global Places, Shared Meanings: Olivier Wieviorka and Michel Winock

This review focuses on the edited volume "Les lieux mondiaux de l'Histoire de France" (Perrin, 2025), which explores how certain places become global points of reference and what cultural, literary, historical, and political meanings are concentrated in them. The volume brings together interdisciplinary contributions that analyze "places in the world" not only as geographical fixed points but also as dynamic spaces of memory, power, migration, and imagination. The review elucidates the volume's central theoretical premises, particularly the tension between local rootedness and the global circulation of meanings. It also discusses the methodological diversity of the contributions and their relevance to current debates in spatial theory and cultural studies. Special attention is paid to the extent to which "Les lieux mondiaux" opens up new perspectives on the symbolic construction of cosmopolitanism and what impulses the volume provides for literary studies' engagement with space, globalization, and cultural translation.

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Rentrée littéraire: contemporary French literature
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