After her father’s death, the philosopher Adele Van Riet publishes Inconsolable. A very beautiful universal text, where facing the death of a loved one brings us back to life.
With her new book, philosopher Adele Van Riet follows suit ordinary lifeprevious history. the narrator loses his father while he is expecting a child, and he who aimed to grasp the indescribable of the ordinary now faces the blind spot of existence as well as life, writing, death.
The death of a close relative leaves one inconsolable, but isn’t a person inherently inconsolable? And we should definitely regret it? The philosopher very sensitively recounts the experience of irreparable loss over the course of a year, from which he emerges transformed. A meeting with the former producer and presenter the ways of philosophyAbout France Culture, which was named last August under the leadership of France Inter.
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Miss Figaro. – How would you describe your project?
Adele Van Riet. – I wanted to vividly portray what happens when you have the universal experience of not only losing your father, but witnessing…
Source: Le Figaro
