This article explores the relationship between fictional war narratives and common war imagery, using Guy Debord’s theory of the spectacle, according to which representations alienate individuals and collectivities from the reality of experiences. Through novels and plays by Wajdi Mouawad, Maïssa Bey and Mathias Énard, we look at how contemporary literature generates an ethical discourse around visual representations of war, complexifies the reality of events in the face of a current tendency to trivialize images, questions the visual modes of interaction we have with the experience of war, all the while maintaining, through the possibilities of language and fiction, a critical distance from its own practice.Cet article explore la relation ...
International audienceTracking down traces of war in territories where no physical confrontation, or...
International audienceTracking down traces of war in territories where no physical confrontation, or...
In this paper two different forms of representation of the Irish « Troubles » in fiction are opposed...
Cet article explore la relation que les récits de guerre de fiction établissent avec la mise en imag...
La guerre est une expérience qui, de par sa commotion, confine à l’inénarrable. Elle oblige les écri...
Cet article étudie comment trois fictions contemporaines sur la guerre négocient leur rapport à la v...
Cet article étudie comment trois fictions contemporaines sur la guerre négocient leur rapport à la v...
La présente recherche interroge l'écriture littéraire de la Grande Guerre et de la guerre Iran-Irak,...
This article proposes an analysis of some images from contemporary children’s picture books, in Fren...
What do we watch when we watch war? Who manages public perceptions of war and how? Watching War on t...
What do we watch when we watch war? Who manages public perceptions of war and how? Watching War on t...
The war is an experience that, by its commotion, condemned to unspeakable. It forces writers to defi...
The war is an experience that, by its commotion, condemned to unspeakable. It forces writers to defi...
The war is an experience that, by its commotion, condemned to unspeakable. It forces writers to defi...
The war is an experience that, by its commotion, condemned to unspeakable. It forces writers to defi...
International audienceTracking down traces of war in territories where no physical confrontation, or...
International audienceTracking down traces of war in territories where no physical confrontation, or...
In this paper two different forms of representation of the Irish « Troubles » in fiction are opposed...
Cet article explore la relation que les récits de guerre de fiction établissent avec la mise en imag...
La guerre est une expérience qui, de par sa commotion, confine à l’inénarrable. Elle oblige les écri...
Cet article étudie comment trois fictions contemporaines sur la guerre négocient leur rapport à la v...
Cet article étudie comment trois fictions contemporaines sur la guerre négocient leur rapport à la v...
La présente recherche interroge l'écriture littéraire de la Grande Guerre et de la guerre Iran-Irak,...
This article proposes an analysis of some images from contemporary children’s picture books, in Fren...
What do we watch when we watch war? Who manages public perceptions of war and how? Watching War on t...
What do we watch when we watch war? Who manages public perceptions of war and how? Watching War on t...
The war is an experience that, by its commotion, condemned to unspeakable. It forces writers to defi...
The war is an experience that, by its commotion, condemned to unspeakable. It forces writers to defi...
The war is an experience that, by its commotion, condemned to unspeakable. It forces writers to defi...
The war is an experience that, by its commotion, condemned to unspeakable. It forces writers to defi...
International audienceTracking down traces of war in territories where no physical confrontation, or...
International audienceTracking down traces of war in territories where no physical confrontation, or...
In this paper two different forms of representation of the Irish « Troubles » in fiction are opposed...