Resistance, Rebellion, and Death
First US edition | |
Author | Albert Camus |
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Language | French |
Publisher | Alfred A. Knopf (US) Hamish Hamilton (UK) |
Publication date | 1961 |
Resistance, Rebellion, and Death (French: Lettres à un ami allemand, "Letters to a German Friend") is a 1960 collection of essays written by Albert Camus and selected by the author prior to his death. The essays here generally involve conflicts near the Mediterranean, with an emphasis on his home country Algeria, and on the Algerian War of Independence in particular. He also criticizes capital punishment ("Reflections on the Guillotine") and totalitarianism in particular.
Camus proclaims the call to justice and the struggle for freedom also declaimed in the Old Testament, particularly the minor prophets. But he does so in a modern context, where God is silent and man is the master of his own destiny. Although he sees no messianic age, he proclaims the hope that by continuous effort, evil can be diminished and freedom and justice may become more prevalent.
Also collected here, in the essay "The Artist and His Time," is the address Camus gave in December 1957 at the University of Uppsala, entitled "Create Dangerously". The speech is reminiscent of Tolstoy's essay, "What is Art?", in that Camus speaks of the social context of art, concluding that "the only justification [for the artist] ... is to speak up for those ... who cannot do so."
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- The Stranger
- The Plague
- The Fall
- A Happy Death
- The First Man
- Exile and the Kingdom
- "The Adulterous Woman"
- "The Renegade"
- "The Silent Men"
- "The Guest"
- "The Artist at Work"
- "The Growing Stone"
- Caligula
- The Misunderstanding
- The State of Siege
- The Just Assassins
- The Possessed
- Requiem for a Nun
- The Myth of Sisyphus
- The Rebel
- "Reflections on the Guillotine"
- Resistance, Rebellion, and Death
- Francine Faure (second wife)