Rivista di Storia della Filosofia
Volume 69, Issue 1, 2014, Pages 127-160
The debate on the war in Algeria. The solitude of the terrorist. Exile in France [Camus e il dibattito sulla guerra d'algeria. La solitudine del terrorista, l'esilio francese] (Article)
Petyx V.*
-
a
Università di Torino, Italy
Abstract
"I believe in justice, but I would defend my mother before justice". This statement by Camus came in the middle of the war in Algeria and caused a scandal. But, in the conflict between justice for the Algerian people and family affections, it reflected to some extent the contradiction he felt between "origin" (French) and "birth" (Algerian), which underlies his existential, political, and philosophical history. The significant moments in Camus' life range from his philosophical education at the school of Jean Grenier in the thirties to his experiences in the Liberation group Combat, from his subsequent U-turn (revirement) on the historical role of violence to the critique of the Hegelian-Marxist "absolute" and revolutionary nihilism. Retracing these moments constitutes in the author's intent the necessary preamble to reconstructing in its complexity the debate on the war in North Africa. The philosophical traces that, among utopian references and complaints of political messianism, substantiate Camus' project for Algeria make it possible to extend the temporal horizon of the debate, redefine its terms and address a range of questions, not least that very controversial one concerning Camus' silence in the face of the Algerian tragedy. Camus himself dealt with this silence in the Avant-Propos to Croniques Algériennes, written two years before his death. In his indictment of the cause of independence that united - despite the differences in philosophical perspective and the different political projects - the revolutionary anti-colonialism of Sartre and Francis Jeanson, the reformist proposal of Paul Ricoeur and Jean-Marie Domenach, and the realistic analysis of François Furet and Raymond Aron on the costs and the end to colonialism in Algeria, Camus claimed for himself the solitary search for a third way between repression and armed conflict, between colonialism and independence. But at the same time he recognized its "failure". © FrancoAngeli.
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Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84899087820&partnerID=40&md5=f59689bdfdd260742e85e99769518b80
ISSN: 03932516
Original Language: Italian