Counter-archive of the children's colony: Simon Johannin
Simon Johannin's "Le Fin Chemin des anges" (2025) reconstructs the fates of the boys who lived and died in the children's colony on Île du Levant—an institution marked by isolation, violence, and forced labor. At its heart is Louis, a sensitive, homoerotically inclined boy whose "deviance" in the 19th century leads to moral and legal condemnation and plunges him into the colony's system. There, the children are weakened, humiliated, and forced to work; many die of hunger, disease, or abuse. Louis's life is reconstructed from fragments, flashbacks, and archival remnants, while the ruins of the place serve as a resonating chamber for the silenced voices. The novel portrays the colony not as an educational institution, but as a machine for the systematic destruction of young bodies and lives—making audible the violent history of a place largely silenced by the archives. Johannin's novel is exemplary of the new "Locus" book series in that it makes an abandoned place legible as a palimpsest-like repository of traumatic history. The article shows how Johannin interweaves spatial, archival, and poetic levels to give a voice to those children who were de-individualized and erased in official documents. The text's dual movement is particularly emphasized: on the one hand, the precise analysis of the colony's architecture as a disciplinary apparatus; on the other, the imaginative reconstruction of a single biography that stands for a multitude of lost lives. The review explores how Johannin politically charges sexuality, physicality, and memory by exposing the pathologization of Louis's homosexuality as a mechanism of societal violence and interpreting the poetics of touch—the "flashes" that emerge from the ruins—as a form of literary witnessing. Overall, the essay identifies the novel as a counter-archive that transforms the silence of a violently forgotten place into narrative presence, thereby making the ethical dimension of literature visible.
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