“I have rid myself of nearly everything. Of family, marriage, work, apartments, belongings, people.” From its opening pages, Name announces itself as a book of radical negation.
Debré has described her work as ‘antiautobiography’—a label that captures the force and form of her writing more precisely than memoir or autofiction. Where traditional autobiography seeks to narrate the self, usually with the aim of coherence, redemption or psychological insight, Debré’s project is oriented toward disintegration, subtraction, refusal. Her works are not confessional but combative. The ‘I’ that speaks is not interested in explaining itself but in demolishing the conditions that make explanation necessary.
In Playboy and Love Me Tender, this took the form of exiting marriage, motherhood, and a lucrative legal career. In Name, it means breaking the last remaining ties: to kinship, heritage, legacy, the past itself. Antiautobiography here means that even the autobiographical gesture. The act of writing one’s life, is subjected to the same scrutiny and austerity. There is no indulgence, no narrative arc, only exposure. The result is literature at its most skeletal, its most severe. Constance Debré’s latest novel. Translated from the French by Lauren Elkin and the third in a trilogy. Takes up the task of destruction with unflinching purpose. If these earlier works described the initial rupture from bourgeois life, Name is the aftermath: scorched ground, a clearing.

It is also a short book. Deliberately so. Its brevity is not a matter of economy but principle. Like the narrator’s stripped-back life, the text refuses embellishment, redundancy, or padding. The form is ascetic. Fragmented chapters, declarative rhythms, and an absence of narrative arc all serve to enact Debré’s politics of refusal. The novel is short because everything not essential has already been excised.
Debré’s narrative is stark, stripped bare, like the minimalist aesthetic she cultivates in her personal life. Her prose. Brisk, aggressive, and fiercely declarative—reflects an ideological commitment to dismantling illusions.
Family, the institution par excellence of capitalist reproduction, is here meticulously dissected, exposing the violent structures underlying even its most mundane rituals. “What matters isn’t being on the left or on the right, rich or poor, straight or gay… being free is the void, it is only your relationship to the void.” Debré’s narrator, resolutely unsentimental, drags the corpse of family through the sunlight, inviting the reader not to mourn but to recognise the ideological rot.
Pierre Bourdieu argued that the family functions as a crucial site of symbolic violence. A mechanism through which class position is reproduced and naturalised. Debré’s novel reads like a practical manual for refusing that reproduction. In her world, nothing inherited should be trusted: not names, not homes, not even grief. Her refusal is not decorative, but structural.
The death of the narrator’s father, a moment traditionally weighted with emotional significance, is recounted with dispassionate precision. “I look at him, he already looks different, more drawn, more waxy.” The voice is impassive, almost bureaucratic. The moment is not for grief but observation. It’s a dissection. Of the body, of the myth of the patriarch, of the performance of mourning.
As she dismisses her family’s aristocratic pretensions and the violent denial of their Jewish heritage, the novel makes explicit what polite bourgeois society keeps concealed: class domination relies on fictions and omissions, on sustaining lies about inheritance and identity. The family is not a cradle but a prison.
Debré’s narrator lives deliberately at the margins, rejecting the comforts of domestic stability, material possessions, and sexual normativity. Her queerness becomes less an identity than a methodology, a conscious subversion of patriarchal capitalism’s reproductive demands.
In this sense, Name aligns itself ideologically with a Marxist critique of identity politics that fails to confront underlying capitalist structures. Her sexuality is not identity, but revolt.
In exploring familial death and class politics, Debré’s novel shares thematic ground with Didier Eribon’s The Life, Old Age, and Death of a Working-Class Woman. Both works examine the death of a parent as a moment of political and social reckoning, yet where Eribon offers nuanced introspection, Debré opts for stark confrontation, laying bare the violent absurdities of inherited class structures with brutal clarity.
One might also place Debré alongside Annie Ernaux, whose work traverses similar terrain of class transition and maternal loss, though with a greater investment in collective memory.
Where Ernaux historicises, Debré detonates.
If Ernaux carries the archive, Debré deletes it.
If Debré’s style occasionally tips into the overly aphoristic, losing some nuance along the way, it nonetheless remains effective as a literary hammer, bludgeoning away bourgeois pretension. Her sentences are deliberately sharp-edged, designed not to resolve but to rupture.
There is a temptation to treat her severity as pose. But the severity is the point. “People aren’t serious. They’re not serious about their bodies. They’re not serious about their work… They only go halfway.” Debré goes all the way—or tries to. Her moral vision is brutal, but clear.
It’s easy to admire Debré’s severance. Harder, perhaps, to follow her down the corridor of refusal, knowing what she’s left behind. The novel makes no claims for comfort. There is no future in these pages, only a relentless present tense.
“I betray my origins to prove that the world is founded on a lie, that everything has to be reinvented, but that before that it all has to be destroyed.” Whether the reader accepts or rejects her radical prescription, the novel’s sheer intellectual ferocity demands engagement. Debré makes clear that, if the personal truly is political, the only honest personal politics is one of constant, relentless betrayal.
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