“As a writer, I believe in human beings.” | Writer Leïla Slimani | Louisiana Channel



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“For our children, we have to force ourselves to be optimistic.”

In the midst of challenging times for France, Europe and the world, French writer Leïla Slimani here comes with a call not to give in to evil, violence, and forces trying to split our democratic societies.

“For too long, we have lived in this idea that things were better before. As a writer, I believe in human beings. I am not naïve. But we should also be proud of what we are able to do. How we transform our societies.”

“We have to continue to believe in reason. In knowledge. In books. We have to believe in our values. In truth. Science. That’s the only way we can fight for our children’s future.”

Writer and journalist Leïla Slimani was born in Rabat, Morocco, in 1981 and grew up in a French-speaking family. She studied political science in Paris, then worked as a journalist for the magazine »Jeune Afrique«. In 2012, she left the editorial office to devote herself to literary writing. After several publishers rejected her first manuscript in 2013, she completed an internship in the studio of French writer and Gallimard editor Jean-Marie Laclavetine. Her debut novel, Dans le Jardin de lʼogre, devoted to the theme of female sexuality as a symbol of emancipation and defying convention, was a sensation, especially among readers in Morocco. Her second novel Chanson Douce won the renowed Prix Goncourt. Slimani tells her »dark fairy tale for adults« starting from the end: a nanny hired by a French middle-class couple has killed the children entrusted to her care. The text explores the underlying origins of this tragedy, which was primarily due to the employers’ lack of interest in their domestic workers’ financial and psychological hardships. With a sharpened eye, Slimani describes the reality of life in the Western middle class and shows the disparity of different social types that remain alien to each other despite various points of contact. Slimani’s most recent novel Le Pays des Autres is the first part of a planned trilogy. The novel explores everyday racism in French colonial society through a love story between an Arab and a French woman at the end of World War II.
In her essays, published in the volumes Sexe et Mensonges and Le diable est dans les details, Leïla Slimani focuses primarily on Islam and feminism and the rise of fanaticism worldwide. In 2017, Emmanuel Macron appointed her as his personal representative to the Organisation Internationale de la Francophonie. In the same year, she became Officière de lʼordre des Arts et des Lettres.

Leïla Slimani was interviewed by Marc-Christoph Wagner at the French Embassy in Copenhagen in April 2022.

Camera: Jarl Therkelsen Kaldan
Edited by: Jarl Therkelsen Kaldan
Produced by: Marc-Christoph Wagner
Copyright: Louisiana Channel, Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, 2022

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