Returning to Reims
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- | "[[Reims]] also had a gay bar in those days, and many people preferred the discretion it allowed to the danger of being publicly visible while cruising on the street. Myself, I would never have dared enter the bar, even if I had been old enough. And in any case, partly due to a kind o f leftist puritanism and partly to a kind of intellectual elitism (or what I took for such), I considered bars and nightclubs to be disreputable, or at least contemptible, pastimes."--''[[Returning to Reims]]'' (2009) by Didier Eribon | + | "[[Reims]] also had a [[gay bar]] in those days, and many people preferred the discretion it allowed to the danger of being publicly visible while [[cruising]] on the street. Myself, I would never have dared enter the bar, even if I had been old enough. And in any case, partly due to a kind of [[leftist]] [[puritanism]] and partly to a kind of [[intellectual elitism]] (or what I took for such), I considered bars and [[nightclubs]] to be disreputable, or at least contemptible, pastimes."--''[[Returning to Reims]]'' (2009) by Didier Eribon |
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"Reims also had a gay bar in those days, and many people preferred the discretion it allowed to the danger of being publicly visible while cruising on the street. Myself, I would never have dared enter the bar, even if I had been old enough. And in any case, partly due to a kind of leftist puritanism and partly to a kind of intellectual elitism (or what I took for such), I considered bars and nightclubs to be disreputable, or at least contemptible, pastimes."--Returning to Reims (2009) by Didier Eribon |
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Returning to Reims (2009) is a biographical novel by Didier Eribon.
Contents |
Reference authors
Retour à Reims draws on a wide range of thinkers and writers, from philosophy with J.P. Sartre and Foucault to literature and sociology. He can thus be situated between Ernaux's “transpersonal I” and Bourdieu's self-analysis.
Pierre Bourdieu
Drawing on the self-analysis developed by Pierre Bourdieu, Eribon takes the same approach here. With Retour à Reims, he sets out to explain social mechanisms through his own case.
Annie Ernaux
Retour à Reims is also inspired by the writer Annie Ernaux, whose works, such as La Place, combine intellectual reflection on identity with an intimate, singular history.
See also