The geographic spirit in the novels of Xavier-Laurent Petit : the call from the outside world

Author(s)

  • Florence Gille-Dahy Le Mans University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.51777/relief19403

Keywords:

youth literature, geopoetics, travel, Xavier-Laurent Petit

Abstract

Travel literature for young people provides an opportunity to follow the construction of identity around a double didactic knot: the here and the elsewhere. Geographical space is a key element of the novel, and places are the foundation of the narrative. As part of a humanist heritage, the writer creates a journey and an experience of the living: space and species. Xavier-Laurent Petit's work naturally suggests to readers that they belong to the world. In this literary geography, the author weaves together the perceived, experienced and represented space. He highlights landscapes and a geographical gaze that is very reminiscent of Kenneth White's geopoetic approach. This approach anchors our thinking in a triple perspective: scientific, philosophical and poetic. What is this world we live in? This question seems to be entirely contained in this call from the outside and the experience of movement. At the frontier between literature and geography, and drawing on different types of knowledge about the living world around us, travel writing for young readers has the power to question the world. Through language, it gives a space, a landscape, and even sometimes a path to read.

Author Biography

  • Florence Gille-Dahy, Le Mans University

    Florence Gille-Dahy is a teacher and first-degree educator, whose educational path has familiarized her early on with youth literature. The notion of space is central to her research. In 2019, she defended her thesis called Using words to set geographical space in travel novels for youths : a Geopoetic perspective of Xavier-Laurent Petit’ s work. Her travelling to places and to the world, as well as her own sensibility for geography, direct her work to the representation of the elsewhere. Just like there is a « being of paper », the representation of a person in fictional work, she starts from the principle that there is a « geography of paper », space represented by words and thoughts. Thus, she questions the position of the writer to create and his geographicity, but also the spacial reconfiguration during the act of reading.

Downloads

Published

2024-07-15

How to Cite

Gille-Dahy, F. (2024) “The geographic spirit in the novels of Xavier-Laurent Petit : the call from the outside world”, RELIEF - REVUE ÉLECTRONIQUE DE LITTÉRATURE FRANÇAISE, 18(1), pp. 86–100. doi:10.51777/relief19403.