哲学杂志철학 학술지哲学のジャーナルEast Asian
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Publication details

Year: 2009

Pages: 1-18

Series: Human Studies

Full citation:

Christopher C. Robinson, "Theorizing politics after camus", Human Studies 32 (1), 2009, pp. 1-18.

Theorizing politics after camus

Christopher C. Robinson

pp. 1-18

in: Human Studies 32 (1), 2009.

Abstract

Theorizing has been conceived historically in illuminative and ocular metaphors, and as an activity that occurs in a fixed and privileged relation to political society that permits a panoramic perspective. These elements of light, sight, and distance, are supportable existentially and ethically in post-war, post-Holocaust world. One of the first to explore the challenges to theorizing in this era was Albert Camus. He provided phenomenological and existential investigations of the obstacles to theorizing politics in his literary works, particularly his trilogy of novels: The Stranger, The Plague, and The Fall. In this paper, I offer a reading of these novels that isolates theorizing as an activity performed not from a transcendent perceptual vantage of perfect light and vision, but from the immanent perspectives achieved in the city, among friends, or by exile.

Cited authors

Publication details

Year: 2009

Pages: 1-18

Series: Human Studies

Full citation:

Christopher C. Robinson, "Theorizing politics after camus", Human Studies 32 (1), 2009, pp. 1-18.