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"Life itself is in these pages: in this candid, poetic style there
is storytelling of real quality" - LEILA SLIMANI, author of Lullaby
A powerful and personal account of the devastating consequences of
childhood rape: a valuable voice for the #MeToo conversation.
Adelaide Bon grew up in a wealthy neighborhood in Paris, a
privileged child with a loving family, lots of friends and
seemingly limitless opportunity lying ahead of her. But one sunny
afternoon, when she was nine years old, a strange man followed her
home and raped her in the stairwell of her building. She told her
parents, they took her to the police, the fact of the crime was
registered ... and then a veil was quietly drawn over that part of
her childhood, and life was supposed to go on. Except, of course,
it didn't. Throughout her adolescence and young adulthood, Adelaide
struggles with the aftermath of the horror of that afternoon in
1990. The lingering trauma pervades all aspects of her life: family
education, friendships, relationships, even her ability to eat
normally. And then one day, many years later, when she is married
and has a small son, she receives a call from the police saying
that they think they have finally caught the man who raped her, a
man who has hidden in plain sight for decades, with many other
victims ready to testify against him. The subsequent court case
reveals Giovanni Costa, the stuff of nightmares and bogeymen,
finally vanquished by the weight of dozens and dozens of emotional
and horrifying testimonies from all the women whose lives and
childhoods he stole.
'Great is the Soviet Union, vast its territories, warm its
entrails...' 1959. Whispers of dissidence are spreading in the
U.S.S.R. Texts published in the West are circulating in samizdat,
tormenting the secret police. Lieutenant Ivanov of the K.G.B, under
pressure from his enraged superiors, is handed the case. Leads
emerge, flare up, vanish. Years pass. 'Abram Tertz' publishes
another short story, a new novel, mocking the competent authority.
Shielded by his fierce wife Maria Vasilyevna Rozanova, Andrei
Sinyavsky, one of the Soviet Union's most renowned and brilliant
figures of resistance, waits in his wired apartment, drinking, sure
his days as a free man are numbered. But as Rozanova continues to
taunt Ivanov with her cheerful intransigence, a crisis of
confidence opens up within the regime's resolve, causing the young
lieutenant to wonder, 'are we actually as competent as we claim to
be?'' With the unique insight afforded by his mother, Rozanova,
Gran pays remarkable homage to Andrei Sinyavsky, his father,
reimagining the six long years leading up to his infamous arrest,
trial and conviction. Framed within a riveting cat-and-mouse
dynamic; irreverent and darkly comic, Gran balances a satirical
lightness with deeper meditations on dogma and freedom of
expression, state control and creative resistance, the ghosts of
which, at a time when political criticism is being crushed once
again, are as present today as ever before.
'The best early training for a writer is an unhappy childhood,'
Hemingway famously said. Julia Kerninon, one of France's most
acclaimed young novelists, tells an altogether different story in a
poetic account of her pursuit. Her vibrant ode to reading, and to
writing as a space for discovery (as well as a 'respectable
occupation') entwines the French and Anglo-Saxon literary
traditions as she journeys fluidly through her formative years.
From her native Brittany to the city of Shakespeare and Company, to
a seaside cafe on the Atlantic coast, to Budapest and back, the
author conjures a feminine answer to A Moveable Feast.
'The author's home town is falling apart. Lebanon's capital [...]
has morphed into a symbol of devastation and hatred and madness.
Majdalani is a survivor who still finds in himself the elegance to
smile and hope' Amin Maalouf, Prix Goncourt winner 'It is rare to
capture the moment when it first occurs, in real time, with these
seemingly humble details that describe the instant in all its
depth' Alexandra Schwartzbrod, Liberation 'A short narrative that
strikes straight at the heart' Gaetane Morin, Le Parisien When
Charif Majdalani begins to walk the streets of his city, and to
write down what he sees, the first hints of unrest within a vibrant
culture creep to the fore. Majdalani's reportage through the months
of 2020 bears witness to the ways in which an ancient civilization
slowly, then rapidly, descends into the abyss: corruption and vice
infect the corridors of power; currency plummets into freefall,
rats scurry between piles of rotting rubbish that grow higher along
the pavements. Born from the rancour of existential pestilence,
violence erupts and Beirut's citizens find themselves in
high-voltage stand-offs with law enforcement. Then, the unexpected,
Beirut collapses under the explosive force of 2,750 tons of
ammonium nitrate. The blast kills hundreds and injures thousands.
But through the rubble and the sirens, a people finds its strength
to survive and its heart to unite. The city becomes the metaphor
for each of our cultural capitals throughout the world.
Does modernity trample on tradition, or can it in fact be a vehicle
for the sacred? How can one determine whether an interpretation is
legitimate, anachronistic or corrupted? Does sexual obsession have
a textual origin, and is it woman's destiny to be veiled? In Eve's
Attire confronts these questions and more to suggest another
interpretation of religious traditions surrounding the female body
and the erotic. As current fundamentalist religious discourse
expresses a growing fixation on modesty, women are increasingly
reduced to those parts of their bodies that arouse desire,
effectively "genitalised" until the totality of their bodies
becomes taboo. In resistance to such interpretations of religious
text, which see even a woman's voice as an erotic organ to be
silenced, Rabbi Delphine Horvilleur looks not only at religious
texts themselves, but also at their interpreters, as she unpicks
readings that make the woman a temptress, and modesty the
instrument of her oppression. She shows us how nakedness, as
expressed by Adam, Eve or Noah, refers to a culture of desire and
not a wish to suppress it and explores how the veil was originally
intended: not to reject, but to approach the other. Through her
analysis of the meaning of modesty and nudity in Judaism, Delphine
Horvilleur explores the societal and religious obsession with the
female body and its representation and asks questions about how we
can engage more critically with interpretations of sacred texts.
Translated from the French by Ruth Diver
"Life itself is in these pages: in this candid, poetic style there
is storytelling of real quality" - LEILA SLIMANI, author of Lullaby
A powerful and personal account of the devastating consequences of
childhood rape: a valuable voice for the #MeToo conversation.
Adelaide Bon grew up in a wealthy neighborhood in Paris, a
privileged child with a loving family, lots of friends and
seemingly limitless opportunity lying ahead of her. But one sunny
afternoon, when she was nine years old, a strange man followed her
home and raped her in the stairwell of her building. She told her
parents, they took her to the police, the fact of the crime was
registered ... and then a veil was quietly drawn over that part of
her childhood, and life was supposed to go on. Except, of course,
it didn't. Throughout her adolescence and young adulthood, Adelaide
struggles with the aftermath of the horror of that afternoon in
1990. The lingering trauma pervades all aspects of her life: family
education, friendships, relationships, even her ability to eat
normally. And then one day, many years later, when she is married
and has a small son, she receives a call from the police saying
that they think they have finally caught the man who raped her, a
man who has hidden in plain sight for decades, with many other
victims ready to testify against him. The subsequent court case
reveals Giovanni Costa, the stuff of nightmares and bogeymen,
finally vanquished by the weight of dozens and dozens of emotional
and horrifying testimonies from all the women whose lives and
childhoods he stole.
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The Revolt (Paperback)
Clara Dupont-Monod; Translated by Ruth Diver
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R294
R238
Discovery Miles 2 380
Save R56 (19%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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It is with a soft voice, full of menace, that our mother commands
us to overthrow our father . . . Richard Lionheart tells the story
of his mother, Eleanor of Aquitaine. In 1173, she and three of her
sons instigate a rebellion to overthrow the English king, her
husband Henry Plantagenet. What prompts this revolt? How does a
great queen persuade her children to rise up against their father?
And how does a son cope with this crushing conflict of loyalties?
Replete with poetry and cruelty, this story takes us to the heart
of the relationship between a mother and her favourite son - two
individuals sustained by literature, unspoken love, honour and
terrible violence.
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The Revolt (Hardcover)
Clara Dupont-Monod; Translated by Ruth Diver
1
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R489
Discovery Miles 4 890
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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It is with a soft voice, full of menace, that our mother commands
us to overthrow our father . . . Richard Lionheart tells the story
of his mother, Eleanor of Aquitaine. In 1173, she and three of her
sons instigate a rebellion to overthrow the English king, her
husband Henry Plantagenet. What prompts this revolt? How does a
great queen persuade her children to rise up against their father?
And how does a son cope with this crushing conflict of loyalties?
Replete with poetry and cruelty, this story takes us to the heart
of the relationship between a mother and her favourite son - two
individuals sustained by literature, unspoken love, honour and
terrible violence.
|
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