The Rebel (book)
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The Rebel (French title: L'Homme révolté) is a 1951 book-length essay by Albert Camus, which treats both the metaphysical and the historical development of rebellion and revolution in societies, especially Western Europe. Camus relates writers and artists as diverse as Epicurus and Lucretius, the Marquis de Sade, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, Fyodor Dostoyevsky, Friedrich Nietzsche, and André Breton in an integrated, historical portrait of man in revolt.
Examining both rebellion and revolt, which may be seen as the same phenomenon in personal and social frames, Camus examines several 'countercultural' figures and movements from the history of western thought and art, noting the importance of each in the overall development of revolutionary thought and philosophy.
One of Camus' primary arguments in The Rebel is that the urge for rebellion stems from an urge for justice, or, to be more accurate, a rejection of then-accepted norms of justice, as these lead to a feeling of dissatisfaction in an individual subjected to them.
Another theme is the idea that once a revolution is successful, it can become more tyrannical than the original government, as the pursuit of a utopia is a pursuit that often justifies anything, even atrocities, to those who pursue it (e.g. the French Revolution), and that, further, this process is an irresistible one once a rebellion makes the successful transition into a larger-scale (and necessarily better-organized) revolution. Camus also argues that it is the rejection of religion and the idea of divinity that leads to utopian, materialist, political philosophies such as communism, in part as a way to replace traditional divinely-justified moralities with pragmatically-based ones, although he does not present this as a defense of religious sentiment. Faced with a divorce of reality and ideal along secular lines, the rebel attempts to unify the two, often using a variety of Hegel's concept of the utopia at the end of history.
A third is that of crime, as Camus discusses its role in the rebellious nature, as well as defenses of crime that have been presented by such natures through various historical epochs. At the end of this book Camus exposes the possible moral superiority of the ethics and political plan of trade unionism.
[edit] Partial list of persons, ideologies, and movements discussed in The Rebel
- Achilles and Patroclus
- Alexander Herzen
- Alexandre Kojève
- André Breton
- Antigone (Sophocles)
- Antoine François Prévost
- Antonin Artaud
- Blaise Pascal/Pensées
- Byron
- Cain
- Charles Baudelaire
- Christianity
- Claude Fauchet (revolutionist)
- Communism
- Comte de Lautréamont/Les Chants de Maldoror
- Dada
- Damocles
- Decembrist revolt/Pavel Pestel
- Dimitri Pisarev
- Dionysos
- Divine Right of Kings/Louis XIV of France/Jacques-Bénigne Bossuet
- Elaine Shaughnessy
- Empedocles
- Epicurus
- Fraticelli
- The French Revolution
- Friedrich Nietzsche
- Fyodor Dostoyevsky/The Brothers Karamazov
- Georges Danton
- Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
- Gnosticism/Valentinus (Gnostic)/Marcion of Sinope
- Heraclitus
- Ivan Turgenev
- Jacobin Club
- Jacques Nicolas Billaud-Varenne
- Jacques Pierre Brissot
- Jacques Roux
- Jean-Marie Collot d'Herbois
- Jean-Paul Marat
- Jeremy Bentham
- Jesus
- Johann Gottlieb Fichte
- Joseph de Maistre
- Judaism
- Jules Michelet
- Karl Marx/Marxism
- Leo Tolstoy
- Louis de Saint-Just
- Lucretius
- Ludwig Feuerbach
- The Marquis de Sade
- Maximilien Robespierre
- Max Scheler/Ressentiment
- Max Stirner
- Mikhail Bakunin
- Mikhail Lermontov
- Moliere
- Narodnaya Volya (organization)
- Nazism
- Nicolas Chamfort
- Nihilism
- Nikolai Stankevich
- Oedipus
- Paradise Lost
- Pierre Naville
- Plato/Callicles
- Prometheus/Aeschylus/Prometheus Bound
- Reign of Terror/Law of 22 Prairial
- René Char
- René Crevel/Jacques Rigaut/Jacques Vaché/Suicide
- René Descartes
- Rimbaud
- Romanticism
- Russian Revolution in 1905
- Satan/Lucifer
- Sergey Nechayev
- Social contract/Thomas Hobbes/Jean-Jacques Rousseau
- Socrates
- Spartacus
- Stendhal
- Stoicism
- Surrealism
- The Possessed (novel)
- Vissarion Belinsky
- William Blake
- Wuthering Heights

