Conseil lecture de la semaine et petite chronique qui va n'avec : les Bienveillantes de Jonathan Littell !
#litterature #nazisme #lesbienveillantes #JonathanLittell #scandalelitteraire #livredujour #lecture #barbarie
Conseil lecture de la semaine et petite chronique qui va n'avec : les Bienveillantes de Jonathan Littell !
#litterature #nazisme #lesbienveillantes #JonathanLittell #scandalelitteraire #livredujour #lecture #barbarie
Il y a tout juste 7 ans : on a vu Le langage fasciste décrypté par Jonathan Littell et Guy Cassiers : Jonathan Littel explique avoir écrit de court essai alors qu’il menait ses recherches pour écrire les Bienveillantes. La confrontation de la thèse d’un chercheur allemand qui explique que le fa Suite sur https://www.bigorre.org/publication/2017-11-23_le-langage-fasciste-decrypte-par-jonathan-littell-et-guy-cassiers @jonathanlittell #jonathanlittell @guycassiers #guycassiers @filipjordens #filipjordens #ibos
La suite sur https://www.bigorre.org/publication/2017-11-23_le-langage-fasciste-decrypte-par-jonathan-littell-et-guy-cassiers vi
"Call it fascism. Jonathan Littell on the trial of Oleg Orlov and why imprisoned dissidents are the freest people in today’s Russia"
A new political trial started in Moscow on Thursday, June 8. The defendant is Oleg Orlov, a Russian scientist, scholar, human rights advocate, and co-founder of Memorial, Russia’s key civil liberties organization, awarded a Nobel Peace Prize in 2022. The Russian authorities are accusing Orlov of “rehabilitating Nazism” and “discrediting the Russian military” — because he’s dared to compare Vladimir Putin’s regime to the fascist regimes of the past century. The lifelong activist is now threatened with up to five years in prison. The French-American novelist Jonathan Littell, who conducted humanitarian work in Chechnya in the early aughts, witnessing the warfare of Putin’s early years in power, writes about Oleg Orlov, the self-contradictory nature of the charges he is facing, and the importance of defiant dissidents like Orlov and their apparently impractical determination to remain in Russia, facing prosecution. Meduza has translated Littell’s defense of Oleg Orlov originally published in French.