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The Years
A work of Non-fiction by Annie Ernaux
Subgenres:
- Memoir,
- Autobiography,
- Multi-Generational
This book is for you if you're into...
- Memoirs that blur the line between personal and collective memory
- Stories where time itself feels like the narrator
- Narratives shaped by decades of pop culture, media, and language shifts
WINNER OF THE 2022 NOBEL PRIZE IN LITERATURE.
One of the New York Times’s 100 Best Books of the 21st Century.
Shortlisted for the 2019 Man Booker International Prize.
Considered by many to be the iconic French memoirist's defining work and a breakout bestseller when published in France in 2008.
The Years is a personal narrative of the period 1941 to 2006 told through the lens of memory, impressions past and present—even projections into the future—photos, books, songs, radio, television and decades of advertising, headlines, contrasted with intimate conflicts and writing notes from 6 decades of diaries.
Local dialect, words of the times, slogans, brands and names for the ever-proliferating objects, are given voice here.
The voice we recognize as the author's continually dissolves and re-emerges.
Ernaux makes the passage of time palpable.
Time itself, inexorable, narrates its own course, consigning all other narrators to anonymity.
A new kind of autobiography emerges, at once subjective and impersonal, private and collective.
On its 2008 publication in France, The Years came as a surprise.
Though Ernaux had for years been hailed as a beloved, bestselling and award-winning author, The Years was in many ways a departure: both an intimate memoir "written" by entire generations, and a story of generations telling a very personal story.
Like the generation before hers, the narrator eschews the "I" for the "we" (or "they", or "one") as if collective life were inextricably intertwined with a private life that in her parents' generation ceased to exist.
She writes of her parents' generation (and could be writing of her own book): "From a common fund of hunger and fear, everything was told in the "we" and impersonal pronouns."
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