Renaud Camus and Alain Finkielkraut: dangerous liaisons. In his book Pearl Fisher (Gallimard), the academician devotes a chapter to the author of The Great Replacement whom he considers unjustly ostracized from intellectual life.

If he accepts his disagreements with the semantic overbidding of the writer, he defends the one he describes. This article is reserved for subscribers. You have 93% left to discover. Flash sale €4.49/month for 12 months I ENJOY IT Already subscribed? Log in.