Reviews

Algerian Chronicles by Albert Camus

scottpnh10's review

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challenging dark reflective medium-paced

4.0

ynbvu's review against another edition

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Sources primaires racontant la guerre d'Algérie en quelque sorte, les chroniques algériennes de Camus illustrent la prise de position difficile du camp des libéraux, des "centristes" partisans de réformes. Camus soutient la réconciliation, refuse l'idée d'une Algérie indépendante mais refuse aussi une Algérie coloniale sans réformes équitables. Surtout, il refuse la guerre et la tuerie... un point de vue bien impopulaire, dans un contexte où les extrêmes qui s'opposent s'acharnent dans un revanchisme implacable. Il faut l'admettre également : Camus est homme de son temps, et il est sans doute vrai que Camus comprend mieux le petit pied-noir que l'algérien musulman. Mais si seulement l'Histoire était fait de plus d'hommes qui chercheraient une révolte plus humaine, qui chercheraient à comprendre l'autre, comme lui...

missleila's review against another edition

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3.0

Tres instructif ce livre, mais je ne crois pas que les articles et les statistiques est ma tasse de the.

kavbad's review against another edition

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4.0

the core of camus's call for justice and humanity

eriknoteric's review

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2.0

After reading the "Algerian Chronicles," one can only assume that an editor at some publishing house looking to make a quick buck saw the opportunity to publish a collection of essays written over the course of 10 years by Albert Camus in order to profit off the marketability of an established writer's name. The problem: this collection of journalistic engagements with the French colonization of Algeria was a weary combination of de-contextualized op-ed pieces and historically specific political writings.

In this collection, Camus engages thoughtfully with the problems faced by the French occupation of Algeria during the post-war era. While his thoughtful connections certainly were enlightening and carried a significant amount of meaning, most of this meaning was lost by the utter lack of context for a contemporary reader engaging with the Algerian crisis.

While this book may be both important and interesting for a scholar of French colonial or North African history, for the average lay reader who is merely interested in a topical engagement with the crisis or who is looking for an engagement similar to George Orwell's engagement with similar topics in his own spatio or temporal contexts, "Algerian Chronicles" will leave you both bored and befuddled. This book would have been improved significantly by (1) an intense editorial abridging in which all the hyper-contextual engagements were explained and spelled out in detail or (2) because the world of publishing seems to sometimes be empowered by profit margins, not being published as a collection of works at all. While the "Algerian Chronicles" was certainly an interesting read on several counts, it failed from the beginning because these news articles should have remained what they were: individual, journalistic retellings left in the archives for historians to explore and explain.
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