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8 ‘She has a great shot!’: Representations of Sport and Gender in the French Book Series Le Petit Nicolas
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Published:January 2022
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Abstract
Roxanna Curto examines how Echenoz’s turn to sport as a narrative subject corresponds to a rethinking of his notions of the relationship between fiction and reality, differences between elite and popular culture, and questions of style and efficacy. She also considers how running, much like the other sports discussed in this volume, functions as a shifting signifier whose meaning changes according to the immediate cultural and political context, including Cold War history and contemporary politics. As Curto argues, first, the work plays with its own novelistic form, using a literary, at times journalistic style of writing to present a protagonist that at the beginning appears to be a purely fictional character, but the reader later realizes is based on a real-life figure. Second, the narrative, through its discussions of Zatopek, constructs a figurative discourse for the style of the novel itself. Zatopek’s style is described as simple and inelegant yet ‘it worked,’ much like the author’s means of telling the story could be said to be direct and functional. Finally, Courir, which was published in 2008, the year of the Beijing Olympics, uses sport as a means of producing a political commentary about Communist regimes from the 1960s and today.
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