Output details
29 - English Language and Literature
University of Central Lancashire
“Abstraction”, anti-intellectualisme, autocritique chez le jeune Camus
Abstract [‘Abstraction, anti-intellectualism and self-criticism in Camus’s early writings’]: Camus’s rejection of ‘abstraction’ in favour of the concrete is widely recognized as a key element of his world-view and a theme that runs through much of his work. Drawing on Camus’s references to his family background and early intellectual influences (Bergson and Nietzsche) in his juvenilia, this article argues that the roots of this preoccupation lie in a self-critical reaction against his youthful anti-intellectualism. In coming to terms with himself as an intellectual whose intelligence threatened to separate him from his working-class roots, Camus distinguished between a ‘good’ and a ‘bad’ intelligence, identifying the latter with rationalism and ‘abstraction’.
Abstract [‘Abstraction, anti-intellectualism and self-criticism in Camus’s early writings’]: Camus’s rejection of ‘abstraction’ in favour of the concrete is widely recognized as a key element of his world-view and a theme that runs through much of his work. Drawing on Camus’s references to his family background and early intellectual influences (Bergson and Nietzsche) in his juvenilia, this article argues that the roots of this preoccupation lie in a self-critical reaction against his youthful anti-intellectualism. In coming to terms with himself as an intellectual whose intelligence threatened to separate him from his working-class roots, Camus distinguished between a ‘good’ and a ‘bad’ intelligence, identifying the latter with rationalism and ‘abstraction’.