Lexington Books
Pages: 216
Trim: 6 x 9
978-1-4985-6160-0 • Hardback • November 2018 • $111.00 • (£85.00)
978-1-4985-6162-4 • Paperback • July 2021 • $41.99 • (£32.00)
978-1-4985-6161-7 • eBook • November 2018 • $38.00 • (£29.00)
Kathy Comfort is associate professor of French at the University of Arkansas.
Introduction
The Betrayal of Memory in Louis-Ferdinand Céline’s D’un château l’autre
Exposing the Résistancialisme Myth: Jean Cayrol’s Les Corps étrangers
Proustian Echoes in Annie Guéhenno’s L’Épreuve
Matéo Maximoff’s La Septième fille: A Roma Testimony of Internment
Absorbing and Conjuring the Literary Canon in Charlotte Delbo’s Spectres, mes compagnons
Postmemory and Familial Inquest in Évelyne Le Garrec’s La Rive allemande de ma mémoire
Externalizing Psychic Suffering in Marguerite Duras’s “La Douleur” and “Albert des Capitales”
Conclusion
Bibliography
About the Author
The choice of writers studied is wide-ranging. . . Casting a wide net with both authors and periods, Comfort admirably highlights members of groups who have been somewhat neglected in literary studies of Vichy. Indeed, perhaps the most valuable chapters in this volume are those dedicated toMaximoff ’s testimonial novel of Roma internment camps and Annie Guéhenno’s memoir of her experiences as Resistance member and Gestapo prisoner. . . Comfort proposes insightful close readings in crisp prose, foregrounding the central role of literary intertexts for her corpus. . . New students of the period will thus be introduced to several of the recent dominant trends in the field. . . this volume makes abundantly clear the knotted relationship between individual and group memory that continues to characterize France’s Vichy syndrome.— French Review
Kathy Comfort’s Refiguring Les Années Noires: Literary Representations of the Nazi Occupation delivers fully on its promise of analyzing with tremendous insight eight literary interpretations of the Occupation of France during World War II. . . . As a reviewer and scholar, I have spent many years researching the World War II Occupation of France. It is truly a pleasure when I am able to view the Occupation through a new lens. Comfort’s Refiguring Les Années Noires: Literary Representations of the Nazi Occupation has allowed me to do that.
— Cincinnati Romance Review