Albert Camus’s lively journals from his eventful visits to the
United States and South America in the 1940s, available again in a new
translation. In March 1946, the young Albert Camus crossed from Le
Havre to New York. Though he was virtually unknown to American
audiences at the time, all that was about to change—The Stranger,
his first book translated into English, would soon make him a literary
star. By 1949, when he set out on a tour of South America, Camus was
an international celebrity. Camus’s journals offer an intimate
glimpse into his daily life during these eventful years and showcase
his thinking at its most personal—a form of observational writing
that the French call choses vues (things seen). Camus’s journals
from these travels record his impressions, frustrations, joys, and
longings. Here are his unguarded first impressions of his surroundings
and his encounters with publishers, critics, and members of the New
York intelligentsia. Long unavailable in English, the journals have
now been expertly retranslated by Ryan Bloom, with a new introduction
by Alice Kaplan. Bloom’s translation captures the informal,
sketch-like quality of Camus’s observations—by turns ironic,
bitter, cutting, and melancholy—and the quick notes he must have
taken after exhausting days of travel and lecturing. Bloom and
Kaplan’s notes and annotations allow readers to walk beside the
existentialist thinker as he experiences changes in his own life and
the world around him, all in his inimitable style.
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Notes and Impressions of a New World
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780226750408
Publisert
2023
Utgiver
Vendor
University of Chicago Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter