Je Suis Charlie or the Fragility of the Republican Sacred: On January 11th, 2015 and Its Afterlives

Following the Charlie Hebdo attacks, the demonstrations or "public mourning" of January 11th, 2015 were heralded by many as the return of the republican sacred, the re-crystallization of a long dormant people, and the resurrection of French fraternity en vivo. However, in the saturation of...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Religions
Main Author: Mukherjee, S. Romi 197X- (Author)
Format: Electronic Article
Language:English
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Published: MDPI [2019]
In: Religions
Further subjects:B Charlie Hebdo
B French Republic
B Terrorism
B Je Suis Charlie
B Fraternity
B January 11th 2015
B Secularism
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Summary:Following the Charlie Hebdo attacks, the demonstrations or "public mourning" of January 11th, 2015 were heralded by many as the return of the republican sacred, the re-crystallization of a long dormant people, and the resurrection of French fraternity en vivo. However, in the saturation of these political hagiographies, a series of trenchant critiques and observations quickly sought to deconstruct the meaning and putative symbolic power of January 11th. One was struck by the homogeneity of "the people" and the ostensible absence of Arabo-Muslim voices in the somber effervescence that typified the post-Charlie ambiance. Moments of silence were mocked in the banlieue and the homage rendered to the "blasphemers" was blasphemed itself. The imperative to "be Charlie" emerged less as a totemic index of republican solidarity than a Manichean strategy which exacerbated the generally perceived "fracture française". The result was not only a calling into question of the legitimacy of January 11th, but also a series of counter-articulations which affirmed inter alia "Je ne suis pas Charlie" or worse "Je suis Coulibaly". January 11th also divided the French left between those who read the event as the re-enchantment of the republican sacred and the people and "liberal" missives which deemed it a simulacra of solidarity, a racist demonstration comprised of "Catholic Zombies" and "Islamophobes". This paper examines the cleavages engendered by January 11th and its afterlives which reveal not only the fragility of the Republic as a project, but also the fragility of the political sacred that has historically girded this project. At stake is not simply the question "who is Charlie", but rather "who are the people" and what form they can or should take in a pluralist republic plunged in the perilous entre-deux between communitarianism and the possibility of a cosmopolitan republicanism. January 11th, far from being a simple demonstration, is a metaphor, a nodal point, and a seismograph of the force and frailness of the republican sacred and its capacity to enthrall, convince, and console.
ISSN:2077-1444
Contains:Enthalten in: Religions
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.3390/rel10030202