In this short, ambivalent text, Blandine Rinkel recounts a memory from her twenties. As an episode, it dwells in a gray area at the fringes of consent, in which she felt abused by both a photographer's gaze and her own—that of a young girl who had normalized her own contempt for herself. Recalling this scene, along with a discussion with Arthur Teboul, leads to a necessary and resolutely contemporary reflection on the issues of consent, desire, and self-confidence.
"Between criminal abuse and absolute consent, there is a gray, uncomfortable, murky world that we are sometimes afraid to talk about, because we believe we have our share of responsibility there."