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Meurtre à Byzance: Byzantine murders in modern literature*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 January 2016
Extract
Byzance est là oú je suis.
Thus runs the suggestively recurrent theme in a recent novel by Julia Kristeva, the famous psychoanalyst, linguist and semiotician (Meurtre à Byzance. Paris: Fayard, 2004). Kristeva, who immigrated to France from Bulgaria in the 1960s, here seizes the opportunity to set forth problems concerning her own East European and Orthodox background. She does so in a form that to a remarkably high degree mirrors her own work as a scholar: Meurtre à Byzance, with its manifold references to medieval and modern literature, is imbued with intertextuality and polyphony, literary devices which she herself as a theorist has largely helped define. And the complex story is not, as one might expect from the title, a historical detective novel set in a Byzantine milieu, but a romantic yet critical story about contemporary society, our search for origin and meaning, our longing for — as Kristeva puts it — a Byzantium of our own.
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- Copyright © The Centre for Byzantine, Ottoman and Modern Greek Studies, University of Birmingham 2005
Footnotes
This is an English version of an essay first published in Swedish in Dagens Nyheter, 19 March 2005.
References
Note
* This is an English version of an essay first published in Swedish in Dagens Nyheter, 19 March 2005.