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- Title
TRYING ON THE VEIL: Sexual Autonomy and the End of the French Republic in Michel Houellebecq's Submission.
- Authors
Armus, Seth
- Abstract
Michel Houellebecq has an unusual gift for revealing the nervous underside of modern life, so when his "futuristic" novel about an Islamic France, Submission, was released on the very day of the Charlie Hebdo attacks, the coincidence was both horrific and apropos. Most criticism focuses on the anti-Muslim and anti-Enlightenment elements of the novel, but in this article I argue that Submission should be seen primarily as an engaged work of cultural politics. Houellebecq, measuring the temperature of today's France, presents a culturally collapsed nation of the near future and focuses on women and Jews as the victims--sacrificed, as it were, by the secular elite. In so doing, I maintain, he pulls heavily from current events, all the while drawing on the memory of Vichy and the Occupation. The novel's premises, topical at the time of its publication, are even more so today.
- Subjects
FRANCE; SUBMISSION (Book : Houellebecq); HOUELLEBECQ, Michel, 1958-; 21ST century French fiction; CHARLIE Hebdo Shooting, Paris, France, 2015; JEWS; SECULARISM; LE Pen, Marine, 1968-; FRENCH Muslims
- Publication
French Politics, Culture & Society, 2017, Vol 35, Issue 1, p126
- ISSN
1537-6370
- Publication type
Literary Criticism
- DOI
10.3167/fpcs.2017.350110