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Le Consentement (livre) — Wikipédia

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Le Consentement Auteur Vanessa Springora Pays France Genre récit autobiographique Éditeur Édition Grasset Date de parution Nombre de pages 216 ISBN 978-2246822691 modifier 

Le Consentement est un récit autobiographique de Vanessa Springora, publié le 2 janvier 2020.

Vanessa Springora publie Le Consentement en janvier 2020 aux éditions Grasset. Elle y raconte, sous forme autobiographique, sa relation avec Gabriel Matzneff, qu’elle rencontre en 1986 à Paris, alors qu’elle avait 14 ans et lui environ 50 ans. Elle s’attache à décrire les mécanismes d’emprise mis en place par Matzneff — charme, discours intellectuels, confiance accordée par l’entourage familial et littéraire —, ainsi que l’acceptation tacite de cette relation au sein d’un milieu où sa réputation d’écrivain primé lui offrait une protection sociale. En exposant ces faits, Springora souligne l’absence de discernement quant à la capacité de consentement d’une adolescente et questionne la responsabilité collective, avant de choisir l’écriture comme moyen de se libérer et de contrer symboliquement Matzneff dans le texte .

À travers cet acte d'écriture, Vanessa Springora cherche à enfermer dans un livre son prédateur, une démarche qu'elle exprime dans son prologue où elle écrit : « Jusqu'au jour où la solution se présente enfin là, sous mes yeux, comme une évidence: prendre le chasseur à son propre piège, l'enfermer dans un livre ». Elle cherche par conséquent à se détacher de cet homme qui l'a suivie toute sa vie. À travers les nombreuses tentatives de continuer de rentrer en contact avec elle, de faire en sorte qu'il ait toujours un impact sur elle, qu'elle ne l'oublie pas. En effet, l'emprise qu'il avait sur ces jeunes filles se prolongeait aussi dans le milieu littéraire, car il écrivait des livres sur ces relations.

Parmi les éléments qui l'ont amenée à rédiger ce récit, à dénoncer et à mettre en lumière les agissements de Gabriel Matzneff, Vanessa Springora évoque par exemple l'attribution du prix Renaudot à Gabriel Matzneff en 2013[1], un prix littéraire français. Gabriel Matzneff est un auteur qui n'a jamais caché avoir des relations avec de jeunes filles. Dans l'émission Apostrophes[2] datant de 1990, à la suite de la publication de son livre Mes amours décomposés, Gabriel Matzneff assume avoir des relations avec des jeunes filles mineures et cela ne semble choquer personne sur le plateau de l’émission mis à part l'écrivaine Denise Bombardier. Cette dernière dénonce les agissements de l'auteur et remet en perspective le fait que des jeunes filles soient folles de cet homme, elle met en avant l'utilisation de sa réputation afin d'attirer ces jeunes filles, elle dénonce ainsi un « abus de pouvoir » de la part de cet homme. Elle questionne aussi l'impact de cet abus de pouvoir sur ces filles pour le reste de leur vie. Par ailleurs, ce n'est pas seulement sur les plateaux télévisés que Gabriel Matzneff assume son attirance pour les jeunes filles mais aussi à travers ses livres.

À la suite des révélations de Vanessa Springora dans son œuvre, une enquête pour « viol sur mineure » a été ouverte[3].

La réalisatrice Vanessa Filho adapte le récit de Vanessa Springora dans le film Le Consentement, avec notamment comme acteurs Jean-Paul Rouve, Kim Higelin, Laetitia Casta et Élodie Bouchez[4]. L'adaptation sort le 11 octobre 2023 au cinéma[4].

Le film est interdit aux moins de 12 ans en raison des scènes de sexe explicites mais aussi de son sujet difficile mais néanmoins importants de dénoncer.

Le film au début cumulant peu d'entrées, a attiré plus de monde notamment grâce au numérique et aux réseaux sociaux [5]. En effet de nombreuses vidéos évoquant ce film et publiées sur l'application TikTok ont contribué à multiplier les entrées notamment auprès d'un jeune public. Le film attiré 40% de spectateurs en plus la deuxième semaine alors que normalement sur cette période les films font moins d'entrées[6].

  1. « Vanessa Springora : "Par son statut d'écrivain, Gabriel Matzneff redoublait son entreprise de prédation par une exploitation littéraire" », sur France Culture, (consulté le )
  2. [vidéo] « 1990 : Gabriel Matzneff face à Denise Bombardier dans "Apostrophes" | Archive INA - #CulturePrime » (consulté le )
  3. « Affaire Matzneff : l’écrivain visé par une nouvelle enquête pour viols sur mineure », sur Le Figaro, (consulté le )
  4. a et b « "Le Consentement", adaptation glaçante du livre choc de Vanessa Springora au cinéma », sur Franceinfo, (consulté le )
  5. « « En assurant le succès du film “Le Consentement”, grâce à un public jeune et populaire, TikTok réussit là où des politiques culturelles échouent depuis des décennies » », Le Monde.fr,‎ (lire en ligne, consulté le )
  6. « Comment TikTok a dopé le succès du “Consentement” au cinéma », sur <a href="http://www.telerama.fr" rel="nofollow">www.telerama.fr</a>, (consulté le )
  7. « « Le Consentement », meilleure autobiographie de l'année », sur 20 Minutes, (consulté le )
  8. « Grand Prix des Lectrices ELLE 2020 : Vanessa Springora, Grand Prix du document - Elle », sur elle.fr, (consulté le )
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sarcozona
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This is a book i’d assign to a high school reading list
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Statistics reach a 'crisis point': nations struggle with a critical lack of data

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sarcozona
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Deadly US Strike on Iranian Warship Puts India's Modi Under Pressure - Bloomberg

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At a scenic beach spot along India’s eastern coastline last month, local cadet Dileep Palla was fast becoming friends with the young Iranian sailors he was assigned to show around.

The young men played music and posed for photos as they finally enjoyed some down time after participating along with 70 other countries in one of the world’s largest naval exercises. Using Google Translate on their phones to overcome the language barrier, the Iranians peppered Palla with questions about the local shopping scene.

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Israel kills 12 medics in attack in southern Lebanon as war ravages nation | US-Israel war on Iran News | Al Jazeera

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An Israeli strike on a health centre in southern Lebanon has killed 12 medical workers, the Lebanese Ministry of Public Health said, as the Israeli assault continued amid a wider regional war launched by the United States and Israel on Iran 15 days ago.

The attack late on Friday occurred in the village of Burj Qalaouiyah in the Bint Jbeil District, and killed doctors, paramedics and nurses who were on duty, Lebanon’s Health Ministry said.

list of 4 itemsend of list

The carnage echoed Israel’s constant targeting of medics and hospitals that decimated Gaza’s healthcare system during its genocidal war on the Palestinian enclave, and which contravenes international humanitarian law.

Later on Saturday, the head of the World Health Organization, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, said the agency had confirmed that 12 medics were killed in Burj Qalaouiyah, and that a total of 14 health workers were killed in attacks in southern Lebanon over the past 24 hours.

At least 26 paramedics have been killed and 51 others injured in ongoing Israeli attacks on Lebanon since March 2, the Lebanese Health Ministry said on Saturday. In a statement, the ministry said the Israeli army has repeatedly targeted ambulance crews while they were carrying out rescue missions since the start of the offensive.

Israeli attacks have killed 826 people in Lebanon since the US-Israeli assault on Iran began on February 28, with the conflict now embroiling much of the region.

According to Al Jazeera’s Heidi Pett, reporting from Beirut, the toll of medics was preliminary as rescue teams continued searching for missing people.

“You can see how deadly some of these individual air strikes have been, not just across the south, but of course, we are seeing air strikes hitting across the capital, Beirut,” said Pett.

Lebanon’s Health Ministry said this was the second attack on the health sector within hours, after another Israeli strike on the southern village of Souaneh killed two paramedics and wounded five when it hit a paramedic centre.

The ministry condemned the attack and denounced what it called continued violence against health workers.

At least four people were also killed in an Israeli air raid on Taamir Haret Saida in the country’s south, the Lebanese News Agency (NNA) said.

Meanwhile, Hezbollah claimed it fired suicide drones against Israeli troops in the northern town of Ya’ara inside Israel. It was the 24th military operation announced by the group on Friday.

The Lebanese armed group also said it launched rocket attacks against Israeli soldiers in southern Lebanon, one in the town of Kfar Kila and the other in the city of Khiam.

Late on Friday, Hezbollah leader Naim Qassem said his group is ready for a “long confrontation” with Israel as the war continues.

“This is an existential battle, not a limited or simple battle,” he said.

In the meantime, French President Emmanuel Macron ⁠in a post on X on Saturday offered to mediate a ceasefire.

Macron said that the Lebanese leadership was ‌open to direct discussions with Israel and called on Israel to “seize this opportunity to launch ceasefire discussions, to find a ⁠lasting solution and to ⁠allow the Lebanese authorities to put in place their engagements ⁠for Lebanon’s sovereignty.”

He also called on ⁠Israel to ⁠stop its offensive and on Hezbollah to stop its actions. “Everything must ‌be done to stop Lebanon from descending into ‌chaos,” ‌he added.

Damage in Israel from Iranian ‘cluster missiles’

Meanwhile, Iran’s retaliatory attacks against Israel continued.

Explosions rung out over Jerusalem on Saturday afternoon, AFP reporters heard, shortly after the Israeli military warned that it had detected incoming missiles from Iran.

Rocket and missile attacks early on Saturday hit the Upper Galilee region of northern Israel, Channel 12 reported.

The news outlet said a “limited number of launches” were either “intercepted” or exploded in open areas.

A post on X from Israel’s public broadcaster Kan featured several vehicles damaged in the attacks.

Alarms were raised for suspected rocket and missile fire in Manara, Margaliot, Kfar Giladi, Misgav Am, Tel Hai, Metula and Kfar Yuval throughout the early morning on Saturday.

“A lot of the damage that we are being told about at the moment seems to be coming from these cluster missiles that Iran has been launching pretty much consistently for the last week at least, and they scatter over a large area,” said Al Jazeera’s Rory Challands, reporting from Amman, Jordan.

“They disperse these submunitions bomblets. Each of those has about 2.5kg (5.5lb) of explosives in them. You can see why that does quite some damage when it scatters and hasn’t been intercepted by the Israeli air defence.”

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Blake C. Stacey (@bstacey@icosahedron.website)

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Tsunamis hiding in plain sight: spreading depression in clinical neurology

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