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Forget Camus - by Oliver Gloag (Paperback)
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Highlights
- Forget Camus allows readers to take the measure of the complexity and contradictions of Albert Camus, Nobel Prize for literature and France's all-time most popular author.
- About the Author: Oliver Gloag is a writer affiliated with Duke's Institute for Critical Theory.
- 160 Pages
- Philosophy, Individual Philosophers
Description
Book Synopsis
Forget Camus allows readers to take the measure of the complexity and contradictions of Albert Camus, Nobel Prize for literature and France's all-time most popular author.
Olivier Gloag recalls Camus's visceral attachment to colonialism and the colonial way of life, which runs through his three major novels, The Stranger, The Plague and The First Man. It examines his political commitments in the light of his falling out with Sartre: the tension between revolt and revolution, his recourse to the absurd as a refusal of History, his anti-communism and his denial of the struggle of colonized peoples.
Finally, it looks at the way Camus has been co-opted: the most popular author in France and the most widely read Frenchman in the world has become a political and ideological battleground. The invocation of a mythologized Camus projects a flattering but falsified reflection of colonial history. It is this Camus that we need to forget in order to recognize the upheavals of a writer who was as passionately attached to the social gains of the Front Populaire as he was to the French presence in Algeria.
Forget Camus is a book about French colonial history and literature; it proposes reinterpretations of Camus's major works: these allow to lay bare the ideological contradictions of French society past and present.
About the Author
Oliver Gloag is a writer affiliated with Duke's Institute for Critical Theory. He was born in New York and grew up in France. He has a JD from Tulane University and a Ph.D in romance studies from Duke. His focus is on colonial representations in French literature. He lives in Brooklyn.