Shoalzheimer: Raphaël Sigal
Raphaël Sigal's novel "Géographie de l'oubli" (2025, Prix Méduse) revolves around the silence and forgetting of his grandmother, doubly deprived by the trauma of the Holocaust and Alzheimer's disease. The narrator inherits only fragments—snatches of sentences, gestures, objects—and attempts to create a book from them that doesn't reveal the void but rather makes it visible. Instead of documentary research, he chooses a poetic method based on fragmentation, repetition, and silence. The neologism "Shoalzheimer" combines the active, survival-related forgetting of the Holocaust with the passive, destructive forgetting of the disease. The book is conceived as "Ricercar à x + 1 voix": a musical search for the lost voices of the ancestors (x) and the grandson's own voice (+1), whose polyphony intertwines to form a fragile, almost unreadable score. The result is a polyphonic text, permeated by emptiness and memory, that redefines the boundaries of testimony, fiction, and literary form.
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