This is an autobiography which aims to avoid “sentiment”: “The point is not to speak of the personal”. Instead, referring to herself in the third person, or writing collectively as “we”, Annie Ernaux adopts a fragmented approach which tends to distance the reader from her.
As implied by the choice of quotations at the outset, she is preoccupied with our insignificance in the scale of things – not only shall we be forgotten as individuals, but matters of great importance to us will seem trivial to our descendants, and our way of living may come to seem ludicrous, even blameworthy. This has become very topical since our materialist way of life, justified by “the need for growth” is now under criticism for destroying the planet for future generations.
Annie Ernaux’s attitude may explain her tendency to give more importance to fleeting, often banal memories than to major events in her life. The opening pages are a list of ephemeral images, some from before she was born, reflecting her insight that, influenced by our parents’ talk, we may have a kind of false memory of events which happened to other people in the past before we even existed. Many of the images are sordid or grim, and it would seem quite arbitrary – a woman urinating behind a café, the glimpse of a thalidomide victim with no arms. This sets from the outset a somewhat depressing, negative, joyless tone which is never fully dispelled.
She often seems more interested in the social history through which she has lived than in recounting the main events of her life. So, on one hand she writes a good deal about the impact of the 1968 riots, the social revolution resulting from the availability of the pill or the arrival of a consumer- driven society which also discarded the taboos and traditions which constrained our childhood until the 1960s. On the other, I never learned, for instance, whom she married, nor when and how the couple parted. She makes no allowance for the reader’s frustration if significant details are hinted at but kept hidden. She writes about a woman’s desire for divorce, mixed with fear of rupture and independence, in an abstract, generalised way. In just one poignant scene, which reveals complex feelings during what may be the last family holiday with her husband in Spain, she becomes an individual with whom one can sympathise, suggesting that a little more “sentiment” in the book would not have gone amiss.
I formed the impression of a bright girl from a narrow, working class background, who “escaped” via the encouragement of her teachers and a good education. However, breaking the taboos over sex outside marriage just a few years ahead of “the pill” and loosening of the abortion laws, she joined the ranks of those obliged to marry and start a family before they would have chosen to do so. She seemed dissatisfied with her lot as a teacher, perhaps because of her long-held desire to be a writer. Drawn to left-wing movements, uneasy over consumerism and the faceless development of new urban areas, Annie Ernaux nevertheless comes across as an “academic” socialist, actually rather contemptuous of workers in the unappealing new suburbs built for them, where she would never willingly set foot.
It is not her style to discuss explicitly her frustration over being diverted by family responsibilities from achieving the ambition to become an admired author. Instead, it is revealed when, oppressed by the annual ritual of the Christmas celebrations in which she now occupies the head of the table, she imagines the crazed action of overturning the table and screaming. Perhaps because she is a writer, a recurring theme is her panicked sense of only having one life, which she has allowed to slip by, without realising it: the living of her past life amounts to a book, but one that has not yet been written - until now.
I found the book hard-going at times. The repetition and lists of people and events are quite tedious and I was not familiar with many of the cultural references. It was fascinating to learn about,say, Ranucci, the last French citizen to be sentenced to death as recently as 1976 by guillotine, which seemed particularly barbaric and antiquated although it was originally seen as more humane than other methods, but the need to look things up continually fragmented the reading of an already disjointed text which rambles on for over two hundred and fifty pages in short sections with no chapters to form natural breaks.
Annie Ernaux has said: “This is the story of events and progress and everything that has changed in 60 years of an individual existence but transmitted through the “we” and “them”. The events in my book belong to everyone, to history, to sociology”.
Yet this approach only works if the events are clearly explained in context to those who did not experience them at the time, and may be ignorant of them now. Admittedly, those who can share her experiences may derive a nostalgic pleasure from being reminded of them.
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Les années: Roman: A40247 Poche – 14 janvier 2010
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Annie Ernaux
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"La photo en noir et blanc d'une petite fille en maillot de bain foncé, sur une plage de galets. En fond, des falaises. Elle est assise sur un rocher plat, ses jambes robustes étendues bien droites devant elle, les bras en appui sur le rocher, les yeux fermés, la tête légèrement penchée, souriant. Une épaisse natte brune ramenée par-devant, l'autre laissée dans le dos. Tout révèle le désir de poser comme les stars dans Cinémonde ou la publicité d'Ambre Solaire, d'échapper à son corps humiliant et sans importance de petite fille. Les cuisses, plus claires, ainsi que le haut des bras, dessinent la forme d'une robe et indiquent le caractère exceptionnel, pour cette enfant, d'un séjour ou d'une sortie à la mer. La plage est déserte. Au dos : août 1949, Sotteville-sur-Mer." Au travers de photos et de souvenirs laissés par les événements, les mots et les choses, Annie Ernaux donne à ressentir le passage des années, de l'après-guerre à aujourd'hui. En même temps, elle inscrit l'existence dans une forme nouvelle d'autobiographie, impersonnelle et collective.
- Nombre de pages de l'édition imprimée256 pages
- LangueFrançais
- ÉditeurFOLIO
- Date de publication14 janvier 2010
- Dimensions11 x 1.6 x 17.5 cm
- ISBN-102070402479
- ISBN-13978-2070402472
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Description du produit
Description du livre
Au travers de photos et de souvenirs laissés par les événements, les mots et les choses, Annie Ernaux nous fait ressentir le passage des années, de l'après-guerre à aujourd'hui. En même temps, elle inscrit l'existence dans une forme nouvelle d'autobiographie, impersonnelle et collective.
Quatrième de couverture
"La photo en noir et blanc d'une petite fille en maillot de bain foncé, sur une plage de galets. En fond, des falaises. Elle est assise sur un rocher plat, ses jambes robustes étendues bien droites devant elle, les bras en appui sur le rocher, les yeux fermés, la tête légèrement penchée, souriant. Une épaisse natte brune ramenée par-devant, l'autre laissée dans le dos. Tout révèle le désir de poser comme les stars dans Cinémonde ou la publicité d'Ambre Solaire, d'échapper à son corps humiliant et sans importance de petite fille. Les cuisses, plus claires, ainsi que le haut des bras, dessinent la forme d'une robe et indiquent le caractère exceptionnel, pour cette enfant, d'un séjour ou d'une sortie à la mer. La plage est déserte. Au dos : août 1949, Sotteville-sur-Mer." Au travers de photos et de souvenirs laissés par les événements, les mots et les choses, Annie Ernaux donne à ressentir le passage des années, de l'après-guerre à aujourd'hui. En même temps, elle inscrit l'existence dans une forme nouvelle d'autobiographie, impersonnelle et collective.
à propos de l'auteur
Annie Ernaux née en 1940 est l'autrice de dix-huit livres aux Éditions Gallimard parmi lesquels La place, Passion simple, L'événement, Les années, Mémoire de fille, et dernièrement, Le jeune homme. Elle a reçu le prix Nobel de Littérature en 2022.
Détails sur le produit
- Éditeur : FOLIO; 1er édition (14 janvier 2010)
- Langue : Français
- Poche : 256 pages
- ISBN-10 : 2070402479
- ISBN-13 : 978-2070402472
- Dimensions : 11 x 1.6 x 17.5 cm
- Classement des meilleures ventes d'Amazon : #9,470 dans Livres (Top 100 dans Livres)
- #1,944 dans Fiction de genre
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Antenna
3,0 sur 5 étoiles
An individual perspective on "collective memory!
Commenté au Royaume-Uni 🇬🇧 le 2 novembre 20197 personnes ont trouvé cela utile
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Isabella
2,0 sur 5 étoiles
Neither fish nor fowl...
Commenté au Royaume-Uni 🇬🇧 le 28 mai 2021
I bought this while seeking contemporary French literature to explore in the original French version (which yielded some other great results), after researching the author and reading some good reviews, but found it almost impossible to wade through and engage with, due to its detached and repetitive narrative style.
Basically it's an endless collection of fragments of personal memories of life during the post war years and beyond, presented in a dry impersonal way as if they were a collective rather than a personal experience (she endlessly uses the pronoun 'on' - one did this, one did that) with no emotional involvement or personal context whatsoever, even when hinting at what must have been traumatic events.
I found it did not work either as an autobiography nor as a historical account of a specific time because of lack of depth, feeling and context, so that at times unless you were a contemporary of the author and familiar with certain household names and events, you had no idea what she was talking about and so the whole exercise was rather meaningless - due also to the insistence on narrative detachment.
An interesting experiment no doubt in attempting to write biography from a generalised cultural collective viewpoint - but one that didn't work for me.
Basically it's an endless collection of fragments of personal memories of life during the post war years and beyond, presented in a dry impersonal way as if they were a collective rather than a personal experience (she endlessly uses the pronoun 'on' - one did this, one did that) with no emotional involvement or personal context whatsoever, even when hinting at what must have been traumatic events.
I found it did not work either as an autobiography nor as a historical account of a specific time because of lack of depth, feeling and context, so that at times unless you were a contemporary of the author and familiar with certain household names and events, you had no idea what she was talking about and so the whole exercise was rather meaningless - due also to the insistence on narrative detachment.
An interesting experiment no doubt in attempting to write biography from a generalised cultural collective viewpoint - but one that didn't work for me.

nick fraser
4,0 sur 5 étoiles
THINGS AND PEOPLE
Commenté au Royaume-Uni 🇬🇧 le 30 avril 2019
Annie Ernaux came from Yvetot in Normandy and her non-personal is very gripping. She understands through photographs and her children and parents. This is quite like Claire Tomalin's autobiography. But this isn't about the scene of London. Annie came from a not posh - how well I recommend Yvetot. I like the beginning of her souvenirs of being young and reading. I liked all of the book with one proviso - all French teachers are lefty and a bit snide about les riches. But this is wonderful. I loved the beaches in Normandy and went to them with my sisters and my mother.

Mike D Mann
5,0 sur 5 étoiles
Un tour de force
Commenté au Royaume-Uni 🇬🇧 le 19 décembre 2022
Ce livre se construit autour de la description d'images qui se succèdent les unes aux autres dans une forme qui n'est ni celle du roman, ni celle de la poésie, ni celle de l'essai. L'aspect en est fragmenté, mais la succession des images se fait dans un enchainement continu qui peint peu à peu le portrait d'une femme, d'une génération et d'une société.

Luciano
3,0 sur 5 étoiles
A collective autobiographe
Commenté au Royaume-Uni 🇬🇧 le 11 août 2020
Overly pessimistic at the end, it is a very interesting experiment. The author attempts to write an impersonal autobiography ('une sorte d'autobiographie impersonelle'), a story in which the Self mostly overlaps with what her society and time have impressed on a generation.