Sociology as serial murder: Raphaël Quenard
The unnamed narrator of Raphaël Quenard's novel "Clamser à Tataouine," a "jeune marginal" and "joyeux sociopathe," decides, after a failed suicide attempt in Paris, to take revenge on society by tracking down and killing representative female figures from all social classes to present them with the bill for his defeat. He writes this "épopée macabre" as a memoir in Tataouine at the home of the 82-year-old Liliane, but is ultimately killed by Liliane and Albane (Hortense, the daughter of his first victim, Marthe) in a perfectly orchestrated act of revenge. The French society described by the monster is a collection of more or less imperfect beings, whose social strata are characterized by alienation, whether from the existential hardship of the poor or the material abundance and pressures of self-presentation of the rich. Society is portrayed as corrupt and deceitful, as its members incessantly use pretense and lies (jargon, statistics, "cultural baggage de façade") to conceal their "inner chaos." Consequently, this "juxtaposition of equally imperfect beings" is, from the narrator's perspective, doomed to failure, and he perceives the symbolic annihilation of its representatives as a necessary and logical consequence. Raphaël Quenard's "Clamser à Tataouine" appears as a dark, postmodern "round dance" in which the erotic interplay of classes, which in Arthur Schnitzler still unmasks social masks, transforms into a cycle of hatred, violence, moral emptiness, and black humor.
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