Beast Man: Emile Zola and Stéphanie Artarit

Both Émile Zola's "La Bête humaine" and Stéphanie Artarit's "On ne mange pas les cannibales" explore the relationship between the bestial and the human, though from different perspectives and with different emphases. Artarit's novel as a whole plays with the idea of ​​who the "beast" is. "On ne mange pas les cannibales" (Belfond, 2025) is a dark tale that blurs the lines between human bestiality and animal humanity, raising existential questions about trauma, revenge, love, and identity. The zoo is more than just a setting; it is a symbolic space that reflects human society with its hierarchies, violence, misery, and attempts at control. The animals become projection screens for human fears and desires, while the "civilized" world outside often appears wilder and more merciless than the "beasts" in their cages. Human behaviors (revenge, greed, violence) are portrayed as "bestial," while animal reactions (protective instincts, adaptability, the "philosophy" of a chimpanzee) are depicted as "human." This culminates in the figure of the "cannibal" Martin, who embodies the ultimate transgression, and Rivière's final statement that "one doesn't eat cannibals," raising the question of whether this is a moral boundary or an acknowledgment of inherent, indigestible savagery.

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Rentrée littéraire: contemporary French literature
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