A writer's topography : : space and place in the life and works of Albert Camus / / edited by Jason Herbeck and Vincent Grégoire.

A Writer’s Topography examines French-Algerian Nobel Prize laureate Albert Camus’s intimate yet often unsettled relationship with natural and human landscapes. Much like the Greek hero Sisyphus about whom he wrote his famous philosophical essay, Camus sustained a deep awareness of and appreciation f...

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Bibliographic Details
Superior document:Faux Titre, Volume 406
TeilnehmendeR:
Place / Publishing House:Leiden, Netherlands ;, Boston, [Massachusetts] : : Brill,, 2015.
©2015
Year of Publication:2015
Language:English
Series:Faux titre ; Volume 406.
Physical Description:1 online resource (240 p.)
Notes:"A collection of articles in French and English selected from the proceedings of an international colloquium held in Boise, Idaho, on April 18-19, 2013, to commemorate the centennial anniversary of the birth of Albert Camus in 1913"--Introduction.
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Other title:Preliminary Material /
Introduction /
Les lieux ouverts et le royaume /
Exiled in a Spiritual Geography: Albert Camus’s Road to Values /
Réflexion sur le thème du plateau dans la vie et l’oeuvre de Camus /
Topographies suspendues /
Tipasa and le monde: Metonymic Displacement in “Noces à Tipasa” /
Formes et fonctions de la prison chez Camus /
Paysages et d’autres réseaux de vie chez Camus /
The Cooper and the Painter: The Topography of the Atelier in L’Exil et le Royaume /
A Psychogeography of the Monstrous in Le Premier Homme /
Blanchot, Camus: une approche préliminaire /
Le tombeau parental ou « le temps d’un retour » dans Le Premier Homme d’Albert Camus et Adieu ma mère, adieu mon coeur de Jules Roy /
Hemingway’s Influence on Camus: The Iceberg as Topography /
Bridging Consciousness: A Topographical Reading of La Chute /
La Peste ou les métamorphoses d’Oran /
Écrire le lieu qui s’inscrit: topographies toponymiques dans La Peste et La Chute /
The Figure of the Labyrinth in “Le Renégat” and “La Pierre qui pousse” /
Summary:A Writer’s Topography examines French-Algerian Nobel Prize laureate Albert Camus’s intimate yet often unsettled relationship with natural and human landscapes. Much like the Greek hero Sisyphus about whom he wrote his famous philosophical essay, Camus sustained a deep awareness of and appreciation for what he termed le visage de ce monde —the face of this earth. This wide-ranging collection of essays by Camus scholars from around the world demonstrates to what extent topography is omnipresent in Camus’s life and works. Configurations and contemplations of landscape figure prominently in his fictional works on both a literal and figurative level—from the earliest writings of his youth to his final, unfinished novel, Le Premier Homme . Furthermore, as a core component of the way in which Camus perceived, conceived and expressed the human condition, topography constitutes an over-arching and particularly profound dimension of his personal, public and philosophical thought.
Bibliography:Includes bibliographical references at the end of each chapters.
ISBN:9004302670
ISSN:0167-9392 ;
Hierarchical level:Monograph
Statement of Responsibility: edited by Jason Herbeck and Vincent Grégoire.