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Journal Article

Citation

Gilloux JD. Revue des Sciences Philosophiques et Theologiques 2021; 105(1): 73-95.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2021)

DOI

10.3917/rspt.1051.0073

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

At the end of a grueling journey punctuated by humiliation and a rape, Mouchette commits suicide. Her life comes to a close in perfect harmony with the universe in which she has lived. Given this insurmountable act that catalyzes her existence - a life marked by misery, lies, alcoholism, lack of tenderness - we might doubt the heroine's salvation. Indeed all these signs suggest that Mouchette is damned, as we see her struggling in this closed universe of astonishing darkness, and in which the theological virtues and the spirit of the Beatitudes fail to prevail. Satan would be the prince of this world. Despite this, we will demonstrate that grace arises at the end of this life, and that Mouchette, a humiliated child, before committing suicide, lived in her last gesture, in a baptismal tone, the experience of the agony which configures her to Christ. © 2021 Librairie Philosophique J. Vrin. All rights reserved.


Language: fr

Keywords

Suicide; Redemption; Humiliation; Satan; Agony; Bliss; Decomposed universe; Misery; Mouchette; Negativity; Spirit of childhood

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