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film forum years without the "Bogart of literature 'Meeting with the readers


THE OPINION OF MALAGA, January 1, 2010

Nicolas Sarkozy shows his desire to bring the remains of the author of 'The Stranger' to the Pantheon where lie the most important figures of the country

Fifty years after traffic accident killed by Albert Camus (1913-1960) when he was at the height of his career, France recalls the author of 'The Stranger', one of the most important figures in his lyrics. Half a century after Camus wrote his last lines, the head of state, Nicolas Sarkozy, made public his desire to bring the remains of the 1957 Nobel Literature Prize to the Pantheon, the temple's highest secular country where personalities lie likes of Voltaire, Marie Curie and Victor Hugo.
The initiative has divided his family, who still has not given a resounding and unanimous answer on whether to move the coffin of Camus, whose life ended at age 47 aboard a mythical 'Facel-Vega' on January 4, 1960 between Paris and Lyon.
The untimely death of "Humphrey Bogart of literature ', and his black hair slicked back and his inseparable cigarette in his lips shocked the intelligentsia of the world.
The 60 of the last century began with the loss of "existential absurdity, a man marked by pessimism about who saw two world wars and the alienation of the Cold War.
The author of 'Caligula' was a writer who mused about the indifference of man towards the world around him. "Mother died today. Or maybe yesterday. Do not know." With these three indolent sentence starts 'The Stranger', which has been in the history of literature as its most famous novel, and in which we explore the moral consequences of the murder and the indifference to the phenomenon of death.
Influenced by nineteenth-century philosophy of Soren Kierkegaard and Friedrich Nietzsche, the existentialists common denominator, Camus said that existence is insignificant in itself, preferring to be considered an "absurd." Understand that truth and morality are specific to each individual and not conform to a pattern of universal and absolute.
But in addition to the history of philosophy, the name of Albert Camus is also closely linked to the history France.
And this is due not only to his pen touched the world with works like 'The Plague' and 'The Myth of Sisyphus' or because they had a resounding intellectual debate with the philosopher Jean-Paul Sartre Gallo, but also because its history goes the recent past of their country.
This illation begins in his native Algeria, a territory to which his family had emigrated from French settlers and profoundly influenced his life and all his work.
therefore focus on several biographies published on the occasion of its fiftieth anniversary, as "Camus, joins algérienne passion 'by Stéphane Babey, who collect the disappointment of the author on the occasion of the independence war that country (1954-1962), ripped barbarism.

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