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Writing shame and desire: the work of Annie Ernaux

Writing shame and desire: the work of Annie Ernaux
Writing shame and desire: the work of Annie Ernaux
The mature narrator of Annie Ernaux’s La Honte (1997) identifies her father’s assault on her mother, in June 1952, as the founding event in her awareness of self and social place, a bedrock memory that represents the one remaining link between the child she was and the woman she has become. As an adolescent, the protagonist is sexually repressed and socially humiliated, incapable of communicating her shame. As a mature woman, the narrator gives a frank account of the childhood mortification that is stamped into her psyche, and (in the concluding lines of the text) flags a later discovery that provides another locus for a sense of identity and continuity: orgasmic sexual pleasure. This study combines psycho-social and literary perspectives to investigate the interdependency of shame and desire in Ernaux’s writing, arguing that shame implies desire and desire vulnerability to shame, and that the interplay between the two generates the energy for personal growth and creative endeavour. The book examines how Ernaux’s claim that her ‘autosociobiographical’ writing is a transpersonal activity that lays bare the mechanisms of social domination relates to her investment in writing not only as a means to explore lived experience, but also as an elemental expression of desire.
9783039102754
Peter Lang
Day, Loraine
10511dd9-445b-4dc7-9ecf-a5939befc41d
Day, Loraine
10511dd9-445b-4dc7-9ecf-a5939befc41d

Day, Loraine (2007) Writing shame and desire: the work of Annie Ernaux (Modern French Identities, 48), vol. 48, Oxford, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt am Main, New York, Wien. Peter Lang, 315pp.

Record type: Book

Abstract

The mature narrator of Annie Ernaux’s La Honte (1997) identifies her father’s assault on her mother, in June 1952, as the founding event in her awareness of self and social place, a bedrock memory that represents the one remaining link between the child she was and the woman she has become. As an adolescent, the protagonist is sexually repressed and socially humiliated, incapable of communicating her shame. As a mature woman, the narrator gives a frank account of the childhood mortification that is stamped into her psyche, and (in the concluding lines of the text) flags a later discovery that provides another locus for a sense of identity and continuity: orgasmic sexual pleasure. This study combines psycho-social and literary perspectives to investigate the interdependency of shame and desire in Ernaux’s writing, arguing that shame implies desire and desire vulnerability to shame, and that the interplay between the two generates the energy for personal growth and creative endeavour. The book examines how Ernaux’s claim that her ‘autosociobiographical’ writing is a transpersonal activity that lays bare the mechanisms of social domination relates to her investment in writing not only as a means to explore lived experience, but also as an elemental expression of desire.

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Published date: 10 August 2007

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 46055
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/46055
ISBN: 9783039102754
PURE UUID: c6985dec-1874-4db0-980c-3cea8b516e8e

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Date deposited: 17 May 2007
Last modified: 09 Jan 2024 17:48

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Contributors

Author: Loraine Day

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