Bolivard’s “Autisme” is a question that refuses diagnosis, a pop track that turns identity into a loop instead of an answer. The repeated line, “Es-tu autiste ? Es-tu sur le spectre ?”, does not seek clarity, it builds a space where labeling becomes the central act. The song moves with a direct, almost minimal structure, letting the words sit exposed, without metaphor to soften them, placing the listener inside the same uncertainty it names.
The song holds a conflict between self-perception and social reflection. The narrator looks outward, “Tu comprends pas les gens, ils sont trop différents”, then immediately folds back inward, asking who defines what is normal and what is not. There is a shift from adolescent memory to present-day habits, from being mocked at fifteen to preferring conversations with ChatGPT, from human confusion to mediated interaction. The humor is dry and precise, “Faut avouer, c’est marrant”, not to dismiss the experience but to show how ridicule and self-awareness coexist. The refrain keeps returning, not as emphasis but as erosion, each repetition stripping away certainty until the distinction between observer and observed begins to blur.






