History and Historiography

What Happened to Michel Houellebecq?

Books & the Arts
WEB VERSION
December 2, 2024
Michel Houellebecq at his worst and at his best is an acerbic critic of consumer society—a shrewd and cynical observer of the absurdity of life under late-stage capitalism. The most effusive moments of disgust in his novels often occur in supermarkets and retail stores where his characters glimpse humanity’s warped sense of freedom, the smallness of their lives caught up the vast gyre of consumer choice, whether it be in the frozen food aisle or amid the multitudes of hummus flavors. In Houellebecq’s latest, Annihilation, a 544-page doorstop, the indignity of the grocery store again makes an appearance as a signifier of disappointment—this time in the form of prepackaged chicken tagine, assembled from multiple countries within the European Union, and a favorite food of his main character, Paul, an adviser to the French finance minister. In a wide-ranging essay examining Houellebecq’s career, Cole Stangler notes that what the latest novel offers is a “window into the ultraconservative worldview of its author.” Tracking how the anticapitalism found in Houellebecq’s earlier novels has evolved into the reactionary and retrograde politics of his later work, Stangler finds a larger story about France as well: a France that in the face of neoliberal policies and consumer soullessness has tacked further and further to right. Read “The Discontents of Michel Houellebecq”→
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Taking readers on an engrossing journey, from Geneva to Dubai to a former Soviet cruise ship to the special economic zone of Boten on the border of Laos and China, The Hidden Globe, by the journalist (and former senior editor for The Nation) Atossa Araxia Abrahamian, offers a view of an alternate map—a world full of “cracks and concessions, suspensions and abstractions, carve-outs and free zones,” in which the wealthy can sneak by the rules and duties of the nation-state and carve out a globalization that works primarily for their benefit. Reviewing The Hidden Globe for the latest issue of Books & the Arts, Vanessa Ogle argues that what is innovative about its investigation is that it “highlight[s] how these realms outside the governance of nation-states offer unchecked privilege and wealth for a select few while also increasing some of the most extreme forms of vulnerability and precarity that exist today.” Ultimately, The Hidden Globe reminds us that a borderless world does currently exist—but only for the rich. Meanwhile, the rest of us have to navigate the limits of a world system bounded by nation-states and incapable of addressing global crises such as “environmental disasters and climate change.” Read “Life and Luxury in the World Beyond the Nation-State”→
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