The term
extrême contemporain is a French expression used to indicate French literary production published in France in the last 10 years. The
extrême contemporain is, then, an ever-shifting concept. This term was used for the first time by French writer Michel Chaillou in 1987. This simple and convenient definition hides a complex and chaotic literary situation, both from the chronological point of view (the temporal boundaries of the
extrême contemporain are in continuous shifting) and for the hetereogeneity of present French literary production, which cannot be defined in a clear and homogeneous way. The term
extrême contemporain, therefore, is all-inclusive. The literary production of this period is characterized by a transitory quality; because of the manifolded nature of such an immense corpus of texts, the identification of specific tendencies is inevitably partial and precarious. Therefore, to define the
extrême contemporain as a
literary movement would be very improper: it is a mere term of convenience used by commentators and not by the authors themselves. The
extrême contemporain can be seen as a "literary constellation" hardly organized in schemes. In some cases, authors of the
extrême contemporain follow an "aesthetics of fragments": their narration is broken into pieces or they show, like Pascal Quignard, for instance, a preference for short sentences. The "apportionment" of knowledge can also be carried out by the use of a chaotic verbal stream, the
interior monologue,
tropisms, repetition and endophasy. The feeling of uncertainty experience by writers leads him to put in question the notion of novel and its very form, preferring the more general notion of
récit. Then, a return to reality takes place: in
Pierre Bergounioux's works, readers witness the cultural upsetting concerning generations which follow one another;
François Bon describes the exclusion from social and industrial reality; many authors of crime stories, like
Jean-Patrick Manchette and
Didier Daeninckx, describe social and political reality, and so it does
Maurice G. Dantec in his works halfway between
spy stories and science fiction; on another side,
Annie Ernaux's
écriture plate ("flat writing") tries to demolish the distance between reality and its narration. Subjects are shown in a persistent state of crisis. However, a return to everyday life and trivial habits also takes place: the attention is focused to the "outcasts of literature", like, for instance, old people. This use of triviality and everyday life expresses itself in a new sort of "
minimalism": from
Pierre Michon's
Small lives fictional biographies of unknown people, to
Philippe Delerm's "small pleasures". The facets of this
minimalism manifest themselves in many ways, through the triviality of the subject, through short forms, or through concise and bare phrases. On one hand, heroicized characters try to build up their own individual way against a senseless reality, so that emarginated or marginal people emerge through the building up of their own story; on the other hand, a "negative
minimalism" takes place: characters stagnate in social and relational difficulties. ;French authors of the
extrême contemporain (selection) •
Eliette Abécassis • Jean-Pierre Abraham •
Olivier Adam • Emmanuel Adely • Hafid Aggoune • Eva Almassy • Marc Alpozzo •
Jacques-Pierre Amette •
Jean-Pierre Andrevon •
Christine Angot •
Yann Apperry • Claude Arnaud •
Pierre Assouline • Alexis Aubenque •
Brigitte Aubert • Antoine Audouard • Yvan Audouard •
Pierre Autin-Grenier •
Ayerdhal •
François Bégaudeau •
Frédéric Beigbeder •
Pierre Bergounioux • Arno Bertina • Jacques A. Bertrand •
François Bon • Michel Chaillou •
Christophe Claro •
Philippe Claudel •
Philippe Delerm • Christine Deroin •
Maryline Desbiolles •
Michèle Desbordes •
Virginie Despentes •
Jean Echenoz •
Annie Ernaux • Maxence Fermine •
Michael Ferrier • Alain Fleischer • Christian Gailly •
Sylvie Germain •
Michel Houellebecq •
Frédéric-Yves Jeannet •
Jean-Marie Laclavetine •
Camille Laurens •
Gabriel Méxène •
Pierre Michon • Alain Nadaud •
Claude Ollier • Christian Oster •
Daniel Pennac •
Pascal Quignard •
Jean Rolin •
Olivier Rolin •
Tiphaine Samoyault • Colombe Schneck •
Tanguy Viel •
Antoine Volodine • Cécile Wajsbrot ==See also==