Arcadia

Emmanuelle Bayamack-Tam

Book - 2021

"Farah moves into Liberty House--an arcadia, a community in harmony with nature--at the tender age of six, with her family. The commune's spiritual leader, Arcady, preaches equality, non-violence, anti-speciesism, free love, and uninhibited desire for all, regardless of gender, age, looks, or ability. On her fifteenth birthday, Farah learns she is intersex, and begins to question the confines of gender, and the hypocritical principles those within and outside the confraternity live by. What, Farah asks, is a man or a woman? What is it to be part of a community? What is the endgame for a utopia that exists alongside refugees seeking shelter by the millions and in a society moving ever farther away from nature and its protections. A...s Liberty House devolves into a dystopia amidst charges of sexual abuse, it starts to look a lot like the larger world, confused in its fears and selfish hedonism. Emmanuelle Bayamack-Tam delivers a magisterial novel, a scathing critique of innocence in the contemporary world"--

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Subjects
Genres
Novels
Intersex fiction
LGBTQ+ fiction
Published
New York : Seven Stories Press [2021]
Language
English
French
Main Author
Emmanuelle Bayamack-Tam (author)
Other Authors
Ruth Diver (translator)
Item Description
Translated from the French.
Physical Description
360 pages ; 21 cm
ISBN
9781644210536
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

French writer Bayamack-Tam's rich English-language debut chronicles the coming-of-age adventures of a teenage girl who lives in a commune with her family. After moving from Paris, Farah adjusts to new life at Liberty House, a technology-free space where the harmonious "love conquers all" credo is echoed among the followers and promoted by their spiritual guru, Arcady. Farah and her family are de-baptized and renamed upon entering the community, and remain carefully attuned to Arcady's daily exegesis and impassioned sermons. Farah is a bulky, awkward adolescent who soon discovers she is intersex and grapples with conflicting male and female impulses. Meanwhile, she is coddled by an increasingly creepy Arcady, who passionately promises her unconditional acceptance and unbridled sex with him once she's old enough. Eventually, Farah learns to embrace and treasure the "androgynous creature" her body has become, particularly after a migrant integrates himself into the community and promotes independence among Arcady's followers. While the supporting characters are a bit too thinly drawn, Bayamack-Tam builds out the family's swift acclimation to Liberty House with clever detail and flashes of humor, as when Farah's nudist grandmother frolics on the commune's grounds and her mother claims to suffer from electromagnetic hypersensitivity. It all adds up to an engrossing and provocative character study. (May)

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