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Camus' Imperial Vision

by

Rizzuto, Anthony, Anderson, Quentin

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Camus' Imperial Vision, ISBN 9780809310029 Own This Book? Sell It
ISBN-13:

9780809310029

ISBN:

0809310023

Publisher: Southern Illinois University Press Summary: Although the young Camus celebrated his godlike difference, Anthony Rizzuto reveals here that this leading existentialist gradually embraced the community of man. In the early Camus(La Morte heureuse, Caligula, L'Etranger),Rizzuto identifies an imperial vision that requires utter detach­ment. It presumes the "ability to be reborn . . . purely out of one's will." Body and mind must be separated, memory stifled. InLe M [read more]
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ISBN-13:

9780809310029


ISBN:

0809310023


Publisher: Southern Illinois University Press

Although the young Camus celebrated his godlike difference, Anthony Rizzuto reveals here that this leading existentialist gradually embraced the community of man. In the early Camus(La Morte heureuse, Caligula, L'Etranger),Rizzuto identifies an imperial vision that requires utter detach­ment. It presumes the "ability to be reborn . . . purely out of one's will." Body and mind must be separated, memory stifled. InLe Mythe de Sisyphethe Camus hero evolves from a detached intellectual to a man of action. Camus urges commitment, ar­gues against suicide. Yet the imperial vision persists; the pro­tagonist is an actor-hero who creates himself, who shows him­self not as he is but as he would be. The plague, a mad moral equivalent to the Nazi invasion, forms human ties inLa Peste.Camus preaches solidarity, shifts focus from the self to the group. Dr. Rieux, the protagonist, reflects Camus' new sense of commitment: he is not an elitist actor-hero but a man among equals. WithL'Homme revolte,Camus affirms human nature and, for the first time, acknowl­edges the past: "The suppression of the past, whether historical or psychological, engenders not an emancipated future but a bloody fiction... Every modern revolution has... contrib­uted to the further enslavement of man." Camus' last novel,La Chute,satirizes both Sartre and his own earlier work. Here Camus attacks the concept of monologue, calling instead for dialoguea democratic exchange of ideas. He also recants his ridicule of the Socratic dictum, "Know thy­self." And reversing his earlier position, Camus concludes that the "division of sensation and intellect spawns cultural barba­rism." No longer an aloof god, Camus has become a man.

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