"Politically, [Albert Camus] was in favour of a federation, and effectively he considered that like South Africa today (or as they are trying to do), there should be a mixed population with equal rights, the same rights for the Arab and the French populations, as well as all the other races living there."
"French intellectuals are mostly petit bourgeois, and it's hard to say whether that makes [Albert] Camus' work more valuable."
Source: Source: www.spikemagazine.com
About the author
Catherine Camus
Writer
Catherine Camus was a French philosopher and writer known for her exploration of existentialism and the absurd, particularly in her influential works.
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More quotes by Catherine Camus
"[Albert Camus] positions are sensed. So, naturally, those intellectuals who don't have that experience have difficulty in comprehending it. But I think it made Camus more tolerant because he had already seen both sides of things when the others had only ever seen one. They imagine poverty, but they don't know what it is. In fact they've got a sort of bad conscience about the working classes."
"[Albert Camus]didn't have much hope that things would work out, but he wanted them to. Algeria had reached such a degree of violence that once such violence is created there's no more room for reflection. And there's no mediating position. If you look at Bosnia today, the Croats, Bosnians and Serbs, they've all created so much horror that one starts to wonder how these peoples can live together, after having done what they have. Already the violence has reached such a degree that everybody is living in hate, there's no possibility of reflection, no mediating position."
"The Outsider isn't [Albert] Camus, but in The Outsider there are parts of Camus. There's this impression of exile."
"[Albert Camus] always held a profound commitment [engagement], a real resistance to all totalitarianism."
"[Albert] Camus' was born in Algeria of French nationality, and was assimilated into the French colony, although the French colonists rejected him absolutely because of his poverty."