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Book Synopsis
While Albert Camus is an internationally acclaimed figure, Jean Sénac has struggled to gain recognition, even in France and Algeria. The correspondence between the Nobel Prize recipient and the young poet, documented in this illuminating collection, is a testimony to a little-known friendship that lasted for over a decade (1947–1958) and coincided with the escalating conflict between France and Algeria.

Their letters shed light on a passionate conflict that opposed two men on two sides of the Algerian War. On one side, Camus distanced himself from an Algerian insurrection that was becoming increasingly violent. On the other, Sénac espoused the armed insurrection of the National Liberation Front and Algeria’s right to independence and freedom. The exchange between Sénac and Camus allows for a deeper and more personal understanding of the Algerian conflict, and of the crucial role of writers, poets, and thinkers in the midst of a fratricidal colonial conflict.

The letters translated here are also the intimate dialogue between two men who had much in common and who shared a deep love for each other and for their homeland.

Albert Camus, Jean Senac, or The Rebel Son

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    £999.99

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    A Paperback / softback by Hamid Nacer-Khodja, Kai Krienke

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      View other formats and editions of Albert Camus, Jean Senac, or The Rebel Son by Hamid Nacer-Khodja

      Publisher: Michigan State University Press
      Publication Date: 30/05/2019
      ISBN13: 9781611863178, 978-1611863178
      ISBN10: 1611863171

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      While Albert Camus is an internationally acclaimed figure, Jean Sénac has struggled to gain recognition, even in France and Algeria. The correspondence between the Nobel Prize recipient and the young poet, documented in this illuminating collection, is a testimony to a little-known friendship that lasted for over a decade (1947–1958) and coincided with the escalating conflict between France and Algeria.

      Their letters shed light on a passionate conflict that opposed two men on two sides of the Algerian War. On one side, Camus distanced himself from an Algerian insurrection that was becoming increasingly violent. On the other, Sénac espoused the armed insurrection of the National Liberation Front and Algeria’s right to independence and freedom. The exchange between Sénac and Camus allows for a deeper and more personal understanding of the Algerian conflict, and of the crucial role of writers, poets, and thinkers in the midst of a fratricidal colonial conflict.

      The letters translated here are also the intimate dialogue between two men who had much in common and who shared a deep love for each other and for their homeland.

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