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Review: So Close

February 18, 2010 15:03
Hélène Cixous: labyrinthine twists

ByNatasha Lehrer, Natasha Lehrer

1 min read

By Hélène Cixous (Trans: Peggy Kamuf)
Polity £45 (hb); £14.99 (pb)

Dedans (1969), Hélène Cixous’s second novel, rehearsed the writer’s obsession with her father, Georges Cixous, a Sephardi Algerian Jewish doctor who died when she was a child.

Nearly 40 years after Dedans, Cixous has published Si Près, translated as So Close, which traces her hesitant decision to return to Algeria in 2005 to visit the streets and houses of her childhood, the lycées where she studied, the poetically named Jardins d’Essai, the botanical gardens of Oran and, finally, her father’s grave in Algiers’ Jewish cemetery.

The pages of So Close are soaked with tears. At its centre is Cixous’s redoubtable, 95-year-old mother, Eve, a German-born Ashkenazi Jew who practised as a midwife in Algeria until she was forced to leave the country in 1971. Twice-exiled, Eve tries to withhold permission for her daughter to return to her birthplace. But Cixous’s need is primal; her beloved friend Jacques Derrida has just died, she needs to return to Oran, his birthplace as well as hers.