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Olivier Todd

Autor de Albert Camus: A Life

22+ Obras 529 Miembros 7 Reseñas

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Obras de Olivier Todd

Obras relacionadas

The Rebel: An Essay on Man in Revolt (1951) — Epílogo, algunas ediciones4,182 copias
Notre-Dame de Paris (1994) — Traductor, algunas ediciones9 copias
Indochine 1940-1955 (La fin d'un rêve) (1993) — Prólogo, algunas ediciones3 copias

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Miembros

Debates

Les Justes Albert Camus en Existentialism (octubre 2008)

Reseñas

The Lourdes Pilgrim is a comprehensive guide to all aspects of Lourdes which includes:
- The background to the Lourdes phenomenon and how to get the most out of a pilgrimage.
- A mini-gazetteer of places of interest in and around Lourdes and the Pyrénées, and a Pilgrim’s A-Z.
- Texts for masses and a commentary on the sacraments of reconciliation and Anointing of the sick.
- Daily celebrations including morning & evening Prayer, Way of the Cross, Blessed sacrament Procession and Torchlight Procession.
- Prayers for various occasions and a selection of popular hymns.
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Denunciada
StFrancisofAssisi | Mar 31, 2024 |
> Babelio : https://www.babelio.com/livres/Todd-Jacques-Brel-une-vie/26876

> Un ouvrage unique qui ne cache rien sur celui que fut Jacques Brel : l'homme, le poète, le chanteur, le comédien, le metteur en scène. Dans ses balbutiements et dans sa gloire. Dans l'éclat de sa force et dans la maladie... UNE VIE. La vie d'un homme dont la voix ne cesse de résonner en nous.
Un témoignage exceptionnel qui donne la parole à toutes les femmes de Brel !
La presse
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Denunciada
Joop-le-philosophe | Aug 14, 2021 |
“Freedom means being able to defend what I don’t agree with, even in a government or a world I approve of. It’s being able to admit your opponent is right.”

Women - “They inspire in us the desire to create masterpieces and prevent us from finishing them”

“The (Liason group) proposes to create communities of men beyond borders, which are united by things other than abstract ties of ideology”

“Only one thing is stupider than absolute pessimism and that is absolute optimism”

Albert Camus kept working notebooks throughout his life as well as being a pamphleteer and a journalist and was always ready with a maxim or aphorism to convey his message. There is much of his work in the public domain and Olivier Todd’s biography uses this material to such an extent that it almost feels, at times, that Camus is telling his story in his own words. As an attempt to get into the creative mind of Camus; I think it works fairly well, my only issue is that Camus wrote almost exclusively in French and I fear that some of what he has said may have been lost in translation.

Olivier Todd does an excellent job of painting a vivid picture of the life and times of his subject. There are excellent chapters on his early life in Algiers. He was born to a poor working class French family and he made his name in the colony as a novelist, playwright and journalist, not moving to Paris until 1940 when he was 27 years old. He had been diagnosed with tuberculosis as a teenager and his health problems, which plagued him all his life prevented him from doing active service in World War II. During the war years he became editor of Combat a journal sympathetic to the resistance movement. The extent of Camus involvement in the resistance is still not clear: he claimed never to have touched a gun, but typically at the end of the war he involved himself in pleas for mercy for collaborators who came up for trial. In Paris he was a powerful figure in the literary world and his allegiances and then enmity with Sartre and many of the left wing intellectuals is well documented. Camus led a busy life at one time he was editor in chief of Combat, a reader with the publishing firm Gallimard and desperately trying to find time for his own writing, His love life was complicated and he always had the threat of his own and his wife’s ill health to sap his spirits. After his break from the circle of Parisian left wing intellectuals he felt himself to be in exile and when the Algerian war of independence loomed; as a pied-noir he felt himself even more out on a limb when he refused to endorse the FLN (The Arab independence organisation). He made a lecture tour of the USA and accepted the award of the Nobel prize; he was hardly ever out of the public limelight and always it seemed found himself tied up in knots by politics.

Oliver Todd does not lose sight of the fact that it is Camus’s novels, plays, essays and journalism that is his real legacy and does well in describing his working methods, his constant re-writing, his dissatisfaction with much of his output and his contention that hard work and study got him through rather than any innate genius. Todd manages to incorporate in his narrative, reviews and comments on the novels, plays, essays and their impact on the literary world. His narrative helps the reader to get a feel for Camus thoughts and influences and Todd takes time out to explain what Camus meant by the Absurd and how it differed from Existentialism.

Albert Camus always had an eye for the ladies and was a noted seducer of women. His long lasting second marriage to Francine survived his affairs. He comes across as a man of infinite charm, who managed to juggle his women around his working life. His mistresses tended to stay with him, accepting the man for what he was, a marvellous companion with an honesty and sensibility that was tremendously appealing. In fact honesty is a character trait that exudes from these pages. I got the feeling that Camus always tried to be honest with himself and with other people. He cared deeply about humanity and although not a pacifist would not support any group that advocated violence. It was Camus stand against the horrors perpetrated by the Stalinist regime in Russia that alienated him from many of the left wing groupings in Paris.

Olivier Todd in a fine conclusion to his biography says about Camus

His enduring human warmth and goodness embarrass some thinkers. The present book is neither an expose nor a hagiography, nor is it a compendium of Camus’s good deeds. Camus could seem brusque or unpleasant, but he was more often understanding and kind. Vulnerable, he was faithful in friendship and love, despite his numerous affairs. He gave an encapsulated view of his emotional beliefs: ‘No great work… has ever been based on hatred and contempt. The true creator always reconciles people through some part of his heart and life’

Todd’s admiration for the man shines through and this is no bad thing for a biographer. I also found myself agreeing with much of what Camus said and thought and so I am eagerly looking forward to reading some Camus over the coming year. This is a very good biography and at just over 400 pages it gives a well rounded portrait of the man and his works. Unhesitatingly recommended for anyone wishing to get to know more about Albert Camus before, or while reading him. My only quibble is, that although Camus is extensively quoted there are no references or notes as to where they originate from. A minor quibble with a biography that I rate as 4.5 stars.
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½
6 vota
Denunciada
baswood | 4 reseñas más. | Jan 19, 2013 |
Olivier Todd rend hommage à l'auteur de 'L' étranger' dans cette biographie éclairée par des correspondances inédites de l'écrivain et de nombreuses photos.
Le lecteur est invité à découvrir la personnalité complexe de l'auteur, souvent incompris, mais aussi la démarche artistique de ce dernier.
 
Denunciada
vdb | 4 reseñas más. | Jan 11, 2012 |

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Estadísticas

Obras
22
También por
3
Miembros
529
Popularidad
#47,055
Valoración
3.9
Reseñas
7
ISBNs
56
Idiomas
6

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