The radicalization of Michel Houellebecq
France’s fêted literary bad boy has triggered outrage
with his predictions that ‘native’ French people could soon take up arms
against areas ‘under Islamic control.’
BY NICHOLAS
VINOCUR
JANUARY 17,
2023 4:02 AM CET
https://www.politico.eu/article/the-radicalization-of-michel-houellebecq/
Has Michel
Houellebecq, France’s favorite literary bad boy, become an apologist for far-right
terrorism?
In an
interview with a niche periodical late last year, Houellebecq predicted that
“native” French people would soon be taking up arms and committing “acts of
resistance” against Muslims in areas “under Islamic control.”
“There will
be bombings and shootings in mosques, in cafés frequented by Muslims. In other
words, reverse Bataclans,” he said, referring to the Paris concert hall where
ISIS terrorists murdered dozens on November 13, 2015.
Even by
Houellebecq’s provocative standards, the statement broke new ground. Going far
beyond his usual criticism of religion — his first big controversy was when he
called Islam “the dumbest religion” in 2001 — the “acts of resistance” comment
seemed to offer a nod of support to acts of violence against Muslims.
The
backlash in France has been swift and broad-based. In addition to several
Muslim organizations announcing that they would sue Houellebecq for inciting
racial hatred, Justice Minister Eric Dupond-Moretti came out to say that his
comments were “unacceptable” as they “created hatred” and “went against his
values.”
Even the
president of Marine Le Pen’s far-right National Front party, Jordan Bardella,
declined to defend Houellebecq, calling his comments “excessive” — while
Caroline Fourest, a public intellectual who’s previously defended Houellebecq’s
right to criticize religion under French law, broke with him over the “acts of
resistance” quip, pointing out that such acts had already taken place.
Indeed, in
the 25 years since Houellebecq first burst onto the literary scene with his
1998 novel “Elementary Particles,” violent far-right ideology has flourished
across the West, inspiring plots and very real acts of terrorism. In 2017,
Brenton Tarrant committed a massacre of Muslim worshippers in Christchurch, New
Zealand, killing 51 in an attack that was live-streamed on Facebook. Just this
week, the trial of a far-right group accused of plotting to assassinate French
President Emmanuel Macron opened in Paris.
“Can you
talk about resistance when you are talking about racist attacks?” wrote Fourest
in a blog post. “For once, the complaint from the Grande Mosquée de Paris seems
reasonable.” (The head of Grande Mosquée or, great mosque, withdrew a threat to
sue Houellebecq after a meeting with the author, but other organizations have
maintained their complaints.)
The question
for many people who’ve read Houellebecq’s books will be: Does he really believe
acts of violence against Muslims amount to “acts of resistance”? And more
broadly, should he face consequences — or should the comments be seen as a form
of artistic license, the utterings of a creative master who is entitled to
holding views, however extreme, about the world? Finally, has France’s
tolerance for such artistic license — its resistance to U.S. “cancel culture” —
failed in Houellebecq’s case?
For
decades, the former civil servant has occupied a unique position in French
society as a “grand écrivain” — one of the country’s preeminent authors with
international renown. Awarded the prestigious Goncourt literary prize,
Houellebecq enjoys the sort of regard once afforded to poet laureates and great
writers in other counties.
When he
surfaces, every few months, to write an article or grant an interview, his
statements almost always make news. In 2020, when France was locked down due to
the COVID-19 pandemic, Houellebecq popped up to declare that — contrary to what
many people were saying — everything would be “exactly the same” after the
pandemic, only slightly worse.
That sort
of deadpan cynicism, what many would see as an antidote to American idealism,
has won him a following around the world. Houellebecq’s primary skill as a
writer was to cast himself as an everyman, an average Frenchman who shares in
the mediocrity of their existence and just happens to be a writer. “Anything
can happen in life, especially nothing,” he quipped in his 2001 novel
“Platform” — a classic Houellebecqism.
But in the
past decade, Houellebecq’s novels have taken on an increasingly real-world,
political bent. His 2015 book “Submission” imagines an Islamic party taking
power in France following acts of domestic terrorism. If there was any doubt
about how the author views such a prospect, he’s dissipated them in numerous
interviews, doubling down on the anti-Islam content of his books.
Yet through
all the uproar, over his anti-Islam comments or his praise of sex tourism, the
author has never faced a major outcry from France’s literary establishment, or
anything resembling a “cancellation.”
The
interview in Front Populaire, run by rabble-rousing intellectual Michel Onfray,
marked a new high-water mark for Houellebecq. Beyond the comments on anti-Islam
terror, the author commented on the Great Replacement conspiracy theory —
according to which Muslims are displacing white people in the West — to say it
is “not a theory, but a fact.”
He adds: “Our
only hope of survival would be that white supremacy becomes ‘trendy’ in the
United States.”
In the wake
of his interview, Houellebecq has done an unusual thing: he’s attempted to
limit damage. After a meeting with the rector of the Grande Mosquée of Paris,
who had threatened to sue him over the comments, the author said he would
“clarify” his comments.
But the
changes, published by Le Point magazine, leave his “acts of resistance” line
intact. Instead, Houellebecq attempts to couch the entire paragraph in more
hypothetical terms, and adds a phrase to say that such areas “under Islamic
control” are not currently a reality, as police are still able to enter
immigrant-heavy neighborhoods.
That’s a
far cry from a change of heart or an apology. France’s literary world, which
failed to blow the whistle on known acts of pedophilia by writer Gabriel
Matzneff, has so far been largely silent on the affair.
Plus ça
change.
POLITICO’s
questions to Houellebecq’s publishers in France and the United States have yet
to receive a reply.
CORRECTED:
This piece has been corrected to clarify that Houellebecq has won the Prix
Goncourt once.
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