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This is the story of a love affair with a culture - a 50-year involvement that shaped at the very deepest levels its protagonist's philosophy, his identity, his life. In this elegant piece of "memoir criticism," a genre originated by Montaigne but finding renewed life in recent years, Neal Oxenhandler examines the impact of Camus, Jacob, and Weil on his own evolution as a writer, a scholar, and a human being.
He finds subtle and surprising commonalities among the three writers, a harmony that motivated him to spell out their place in the postwar literary scene. Doing so, he began to unravel his own personal "craziness." He writes: "They taught me morality, politics, and religion, they gave me clues to secret parts of my psychic life."
- Oxenhandler begins with his first Atlantic crossing, as a GI in World War II, then recounts his postwar return when traces of these writers were still intact. "I could walk down their streets, read their books, interview their friends." Now from the perspective of five decades he contemplates the contributions of each figure, both to intellectual history and to his own awakening.
Camus, he says, combined political relevance and artistic achievement, serving as a witness against evil in the post-Vichy period. Jacob died in the Drancy prison camp at war's end. In Oxenhandler's reassessment, Jacob becomes a witness to the Holocaust, even though a Catholic convert. Weil, self-exiled Jew, dying of hunger in a protest against the German occupation of France, is viewed by Oxenhandler as a transgressive figure of controversy, too absolute to survive the contradictions of the modern world.
From these lives, these deaths the author devises a new type of "mediated autobiography" to connect text, narrative, and personal identity.
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Previews available in: English
Subjects
Biography, Criticism and interpretation, French literature, French teachers, History and criticism, Biographies, Critique et interprétation, Histoire et critique, Littérature française, Professeurs de français, Camus, albert, 1913-1960, Jacob, max, 1876-1944, Weil, simone, 1909-1943, French literature, history and criticism, 20th century, France, intellectual lifePlaces
United StatesTimes
20th centuryEdition | Availability |
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1
Looking for Heroes in Postwar France: Albert Camus, Max Jacob, Simone Weil
May 1, 1997, Dartmouth College Press
Paperback
in English
0874518288 9780874518283
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2
Looking for heroes in postwar France: Albert Camus, Max Jacob, Simone Weil
1996, Dartmouth College, Published by University Press of New England
in English
0874517311 9780874517316
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3
Looking for Heroes in Postwar France: Albert Camus, Max Jacob, Simone Weil
November 1, 1995, Dartmouth College Press
Library binding
in English
0874517311 9780874517316
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4
Looking for Heroes in Postwar France: Albert Camus, Max Jacob, Simone Weil
Publish date unknown, Books on Demand
0608219924 9780608219929
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Book Details
Edition Notes
Includes bibliographical references.
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