Humanities (May 2024)

Writing the History of Neoliberalism in the Contemporary French Novel: François Roux and Michel Houellebecq

  • Charles Rice-Davis

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/h13030081
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 3
p. 81

Abstract

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Structured around pivotal elections in France and the United States, recent novels by François Roux and Michel Houellebecq weave together fictional characters with their historical referents, tracing a history of neoliberal economics and its effects on political processes and personal lives. By directly staging the history of Neoliberalism, both Roux and Houellebecq are able to invoke an experience of sudden awareness in their characters—the dedicated businessman Tanguy can, for example, come to view automation as a “genocide of workers” at a climactic moment. By coupling narrative with historical fact, both authors accomplish the difficult task of producing shock at developments so widespread that they have come to be considered inevitable and immune to the influence of democratic politics.

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