Disfigurement, shame, and spectacle: Pierre Jourde and Victor Hugo
Pierre Jourde's "La marchande d'oublies" (Gallimard, 2025) is a darkly shimmering novel about memory, madness, and the grotesque, intertwining the world of 19th-century showmen and clowns with the dawn of psychiatry. Told in nested voices, it recounts the story of a doctor who, on a train journey, encounters the monstrous clown Alastair—a living relic from the nightmarish world of the fairgrounds—who speaks of his amnesia, his disturbing childhood, and the vision of a "marchande d'oublies" that sells sweet forgetting as salvation. Jourde crafts a darkly aesthetic parable about the disintegration of the subject in the age of modern science and spectacle—a world where stage and asylum, art and illness become indistinguishable. In striking proximity to Victor Hugo's "L'homme qui rit", Jourde radicalizes the romantic motif of the distorted face: Laughter, once a symbol of accusation, becomes a symptom of a universal decay.
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