Poetics of Childhood: Sébastien Dulude, Amiante (2024)
Sébastien Dulude's novel "Amiante" (2024) recounts the childhood of Steve Dubois in the Canadian mining town of Thetford Mines—a place ecologically and socially contaminated by asbestos mining. In a world of violence, disease, and simmering resignation, Steve finds an existential friendship with Charlélie Poulin, a boy his own age: together they build tree houses, roam through devastated landscapes, and share their first, tender experiences of physical intimacy. The episodic, fragmentary structure of "Amiante" reflects the poetic work of memory: Dulude portrays childhood as permeated by vulnerability, beauty, danger, and sensuality. Physical experiences—heat and dust, injuries, touch—shape perception and forge an early intensity of awareness that becomes the origin of poetic language. The article examines how Dulude does not nostalgically idealize childhood, but rather presents it as a dynamic origin of storytelling – a form of experience in which the first impulses of language, imagination, and loss intertwine. "Amiante" is a melancholic, powerful book about childhood in the face of a toxic world – and about the possibility of preserving the ephemeral through language.
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