In his presentation, delivered before a group of young attendees gathered at the Tardieu Library on Faubert Street, Jean-Euphèle Milcé spoke candidly. “Literature is a place, like a country. A space where one can express oneself without constraint,” he asserted. For him, literary texts are unique and constantly evolving spaces. Reading and writing are acts of reflection, analysis, and an effort to understand the surrounding world. “It is an intelligent form of communication between us,” he added.
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