Open Research Newcastle
Browse

Camus’ Algerian in Paris: a prose poetic reading of L’Étranger

Download (196.25 kB)
journal contribution
posted on 2025-05-09, 07:41 authored by Alistair RollsAlistair Rolls
This paper demonstrates that L’Étranger, Camus' famous novel about an outsider, had by as early as 1946 become just as much of an 'insider' in terms of its affiliation to the Parisian literary tradition. More than an insider simply by virtue of its contemporary place in the French canon, then, the novel is also intertextually bound to a tradition of oxymoronic poetics dating back to Charles Baudelaire's Paris Spleen (Les Petits poèmes en prose). I shall examine the way in which L’Étranger performs its prose poetics, thereby establishing it as exemplary of a Parisian model of modernity. Additionally, the famous scene on the beach will be considered as a liminal space and as a literary translation of Paris into the desert, which, once a joke for Paris's relationship to provincial France, became after the Second World War a new allegory for the capital's self-alterity.

History

Journal title

Sophia

Volume

50

Issue

4

Pagination

527-541

Publisher

Springer

Language

  • en, English

College/Research Centre

Faculty of Education and Arts

School

School of Humanities and Social Science

Rights statement

The final publication is available at www.springerlink.com

Usage metrics

    Publications

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC