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‘Little bits of horror’

The unravelling of the self
by
August 2024, no. 467

War by Louis-Ferdinand Céline, translated from the French by Charlotte Mandell

New Directions, US$14.95 pb, 144 pp

‘Little bits of horror’

The unravelling of the self
by
August 2024, no. 467

If Louis-Ferdinand Céline were around today, he would almost certainly be cancelled. So why publish a previously unknown fragment of his? Unlike some writers, whose views are inferred from their work, Céline’s anti-Semitism was beyond doubt, if at times a little confused. He wrote two anti-Semitic novels and a pamphlet, and associated with collaborators and Nazis. He was, however, not a card-carrying member of any political partyand did not subscribe to fascist ideology, beyond the notion of the expulsion of the Jews from France. He certainly didn’t believe in the possibility of some master race. Humans are vile, was his central belief. As the character Ferdinand says in War: ‘Your instinct is never wrong when it faces the ghastliness of man [sic].’

War

War

by Louis-Ferdinand Céline, translated from the French by Charlotte Mandell

New Directions, US$14.95 pb, 144 pp

From the New Issue

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