Professor Annabel Kim on Exofiction: A Contemporary French Identity Crisis

Date: 

Thursday, April 25, 2024, 6:00pm

Location: 

Barker Center, Room 133

floating lettersNOVEL THEORY

SPEAKER: Annabel Kim, Romance Languages and Literatures, Harvard University

Discussion will focus on a recent essay of Professor Kim's (forthcoming in New Literary History, and available now from our seminar website: it is described below. Professor Kim will be summarizing the essay, however, as well as guiding our discussion, so please don't hesitate to join us even if your time for end-of-the-semester reading feels short.

In the context of contemporary French literature’s turn toward the real, exofiction (fictionalized biography, roughly speaking) is often considered the antithesis to autofiction, its much better known and more visible literary cousin. Where autofiction is accused of being a narcissistic, navel-gazing form of writing, exofiction, as its prefix indicates, is framed as being turned outward, toward the world of history, the world of others, appearing to free exofiction from the self-enclosed reflexivity associated with autofiction. In this article, I take up the exofictions of three well-known contemporary French authors—Laurent Binet, Emmanuel Carrère, and Yannick Haenel—in order to argue against this definitional opposition to claim, instead, that exofiction is indeed another form of autofiction, one that taps into the autos of the French nation, and is symptomatic of the collective identity crisis surrounding Frenchness in the twenty-first century.

About the Speaker

Annabel L. Kim is Professor of Romance Languages and Literatures at Harvard University. A specialist of twentieth- and twenty-first-century French literature, Kim is the author of Unbecoming Language: Anti-Identitarian French Feminist Fictions (Ohio State University Press, 2018) and Cacaphonies: The Excremental Canon of French Literature (University of Minnesota Press, 2022) and the translator into English of Céline Minard’s Plasmas (Deep Vellum, fall 2024). Kim is also the editor of a special issue of Diacritics, "Citation, Otherwise," on the politics of citation, and co-editor, with Morgane Cadieu, of the latest issue of Yale French Studies, "Lesbian Materialism: The Life and Work of Monique Wittig."

 

Pre-circulated paper attached below. Register here for the password to access the paper.

86296834_exofiction_as_autofiction_-_nlh.pdf271 KB