Secularization, Profanation, and Knowledge of the Heart in Contemporary French Fiction

Given the highly contested nature of the debate over secularization in modern literature, this paper examines the ways in which four contemporary French novelists address questions of human and divine absence in their fiction, focusing on Joël Egloff’s <i>J’enquête</i>, Gaspard-Marie Jan...

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Main Author: Roy Peachey
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2025-05-01
Series:Religions
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/16/5/642
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author Roy Peachey
author_facet Roy Peachey
author_sort Roy Peachey
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description Given the highly contested nature of the debate over secularization in modern literature, this paper examines the ways in which four contemporary French novelists address questions of human and divine absence in their fiction, focusing on Joël Egloff’s <i>J’enquête</i>, Gaspard-Marie Janvier’s <i>Le dernier dimanche</i>, Jérôme Ferrari’s <i>Le sermon sur la chute de Rome</i>, and Sylvie Germain’s <i>Tobie des marais</i>. It argues that some of the most pressing questions of our secular age—including questions of intersubjectivity and human and divine absence—are addressed in these competing narratives of secularization. It then examines Jean-Louis Chrétien’s notion of <i>cardiognosie</i>, or knowledge of the heart, and his argument that profanation, rather than secularization as such, is of central importance in the modern novel’s construction of meaning before concluding with a close reading of Jérôme Ferrari’s <i>Le sermon sur la chute de Rome</i> and a consideration of the heart in Sylvie Germain’s <i>Tobie des marais</i> as a first step toward establishing the means by which profanation has been faced and overcome in recent fictional texts.
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spelling doaj-art-8aebb4678c3a49268c0fcd7e8af63da02025-08-20T02:33:55ZengMDPI AGReligions2077-14442025-05-0116564210.3390/rel16050642Secularization, Profanation, and Knowledge of the Heart in Contemporary French FictionRoy Peachey0Department of Philosophy, University of Nottingham, Nottingham NG7 2RD, UKGiven the highly contested nature of the debate over secularization in modern literature, this paper examines the ways in which four contemporary French novelists address questions of human and divine absence in their fiction, focusing on Joël Egloff’s <i>J’enquête</i>, Gaspard-Marie Janvier’s <i>Le dernier dimanche</i>, Jérôme Ferrari’s <i>Le sermon sur la chute de Rome</i>, and Sylvie Germain’s <i>Tobie des marais</i>. It argues that some of the most pressing questions of our secular age—including questions of intersubjectivity and human and divine absence—are addressed in these competing narratives of secularization. It then examines Jean-Louis Chrétien’s notion of <i>cardiognosie</i>, or knowledge of the heart, and his argument that profanation, rather than secularization as such, is of central importance in the modern novel’s construction of meaning before concluding with a close reading of Jérôme Ferrari’s <i>Le sermon sur la chute de Rome</i> and a consideration of the heart in Sylvie Germain’s <i>Tobie des marais</i> as a first step toward establishing the means by which profanation has been faced and overcome in recent fictional texts.https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/16/5/642secularizationprofanationcardiognosieheartabsencecontemporary French fiction
spellingShingle Roy Peachey
Secularization, Profanation, and Knowledge of the Heart in Contemporary French Fiction
Religions
secularization
profanation
cardiognosie
heart
absence
contemporary French fiction
title Secularization, Profanation, and Knowledge of the Heart in Contemporary French Fiction
title_full Secularization, Profanation, and Knowledge of the Heart in Contemporary French Fiction
title_fullStr Secularization, Profanation, and Knowledge of the Heart in Contemporary French Fiction
title_full_unstemmed Secularization, Profanation, and Knowledge of the Heart in Contemporary French Fiction
title_short Secularization, Profanation, and Knowledge of the Heart in Contemporary French Fiction
title_sort secularization profanation and knowledge of the heart in contemporary french fiction
topic secularization
profanation
cardiognosie
heart
absence
contemporary French fiction
url https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/16/5/642
work_keys_str_mv AT roypeachey secularizationprofanationandknowledgeoftheheartincontemporaryfrenchfiction