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Correspondence, 1932-1960 / Albert Camus & Jean Grenier ; translated and with an introduction by Jan F. Rigaud ; with annotations by Marguerite Dobrenn.
Van Pelt Library PQ2605.A3734 Z48313 2003
Available
- Format:
- Book
- Author/Creator:
- Camus, Albert, 1913-1960.
- Standardized Title:
- Correspondence. Selections. English
- Language:
- English
- French
- Subjects (All):
- Camus, Albert, 1913-1960--Correspondence.
- Camus, Albert.
- Grenier, Jean, 1898-1971--Correspondence.
- Grenier, Jean.
- Grenier, Jean, 1898-1971.
- Camus, Albert, 1913-1960.
- Authors, French--20th century--Correspondence.
- Authors, French.
- Authors, Algerian.
- Authors, Algerian--20th century--Correspondence.
- Genre:
- Correspondence.
- Personal correspondence.
- Physical Description:
- xxiii, 277 pages : illustrations, portraits, facsimiles ; 24 cm
- Other Title:
- Albert Camus & Jean Grenier
- Place of Publication:
- Lincoln : University of Nebraska Press, [2003]
- Language Note:
- Translated from the French.
- Summary:
- As a philosophy teacher, mentor, and friend, Jean Grenier (1898-1971) had an enormous influence on the young Albert Camus (1913-1960), who, in fact, acknowledged that Grenier's Les Iles had touched the very core of his sensibility and provided him with both a "terrain for reflection, and a format" that he would later use for his own essays. Their correspondence, beginning when the seventeen-year-old Camus was Grenier's student at the Grand Lycee of Algiers, documents the young man's struggle to become a writer and find his own voice, a period in which he turned frequently to his mentor for advice, comfort, and direction. The letters cover a period of almost thirty years, from 1932 to Camus's untimely death in 1960. Because Camus destroyed the earlier correspondence he received, the first twenty-six letters in the volume are his only; the full exchange begins in 1940. These enlightening letters offer invaluable glimpses into the development of Camus's aesthetic ideas, literary production, and political stance. In contrast to the correspondence of Grenier, who throughout remains somewhat reticent about his life and doubtful about himself and his works, Camus's letters are a window into his most profound thoughts and sensitivities, delving deeply into his psyche and, at times, revealing a side of the writer unfamiliar to us. Undoubtedly they allow us a better understanding of Albert Camus, the man and the artist.
- Contents:
- Appendix 1 Fragment of a letter from Albert Camus to Jean Grenier 257
- Appendix 2 "Jean Grenier," / Albert Camus 259
- Appendix 3 "On Jean Grenier's Les Iles," / Albert Camus 261.
- Notes:
- Translation of the French ed. published in Paris by Gallimard in 1981.
- Includes bibliographical references and index.
- ISBN:
- 0803214979
- OCLC:
- 52053503
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