Albert Camus Alge
Albert Camus Alge
Albert Camus Alge
2016
COLONIAL ENCOUNTERS IN ALBERT
CAMUS: ALGERIA AND LIMITS OF
FREEDOM
Jared Gee
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COLONIAL ENCOUNTERS IN ALBERT CAMUS: ALGERIA AND LIMITS OF FREEDOM
watching over Meursault and his friends, and the murder of an Arab
follows. Where in La Peste, another early major work, Arabs are
virtually invisible, disappearing and dropping dead at every moment
within the blandly portrayed city of Oran. Yet in many of the stories
of L’Exil et le Royaume, published fifteen years after L’Étranger as the
Algerian War was well underway, the Algerian landscape and the
Arab characters become more pronounced. These short stories focus
on inter-cultural encounters between Algerian Arabs and Berbers,
pied-noirs, and the French. These encounters open up paths of
thought that force his early philosophical notions, like freedom and
the absurd, to be expanded. In these stories Camus places pied-noirs
in situations that draw out their conflicted identities, and the Arab
and Berber characters force Camus’ work into encounters that
question the politics of colonialism and identity rather than affirm
them. These encounters force both pied-noir and Arab and Berber
characters to face each other in the heart of the decolonizing Algerian
context, raising new questions about civility and freedom. Camus’
characters become more complex and nuanced, attempting, although
often failing, to reconcile the complicated position between multiple
worlds where one encounters, is confronted by, and is changed by
the politics and complexities of others. This later literature can be
read as a literature of the encounter in a decolonizing context.
In the short stories La Femme adultère and L’Hôte, both from the
collection L’Exil et le Royaume, the Arab characters represent aspects
of the French and even pied-noir characters’ psyches, representing lost
or forbidden identities, holding the power to confront and change.
We see Janine’s ongoing encounters with the Arabs in La Femme
adultère moving her closer and closer to a personal reintegration, a
forced reclamation of what she could not accept about herself and
her relationship. These encounters not only show the fragmentation
of Janine’s identity but also the incongruity of French-Algerian
encounters in colonial Algeria. These issues become even more
pronounced in L’Hôte where Daru, the pied-noir, living high up on the
plateau surrounded by inhospitable landscape, far away from the
daily functioning of colonialism, is pulled exactly into the middle of
the French-Algerian conflict as he must take in an Arab murderer
under French orders. He must be hospitable amidst colonialism, in
an inhospitable environment that refuses freedom, where the roles
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between host and guest have been so far distorted that one must
closely scrutinize who is hosting whom and at what costs. Daru
wrestles with his identity as neither French nor Arab in light of
forced encounters with both. These stories and encounters
complicate any French presence in Algeria, opening up multiple
possible identities, outlining the difficult dynamics amidst French-
Algeria.
Rene Girard accuses Camus of playing God in L’Étranger, of
setting up the reader to think that Meursault committed a murder
that can be perceived as innocent only so that he can construct a story
where Meursault would be condemned for his personal traits rather
than for the murder. (Girard 524) It is a failed allegory where Camus
dictates the reader’s experience. Camus’ later works, however,
stepping back from this type of strategic interference, let the themes
in his work be pushed by the social context in which he was writing.
Such analysis opens up beyond the simplicity of the absurd, where
even once meaning in the world is denounced one must still
encounter the limitations of freedom and the face of oppression. This
contextualization within the Algerian War allows his work to move
beyond the frameworks by which he is so often referred today. This
late period of Camus’ work, although surrounded by political
controversy due to his public political stance on L’Algerie-Francaise,
allows readers today to rethink his place in literary history, not
simply as a French writer or as the author of French-colonial
literature, but as literature addressing the impossibility of exile and
freedom within colonial Algeria. His stories move across two and
sometimes three worlds, yet unable to be completely integrated
within, or completely distinct from, any of them.
From the first pages of La Peste, Camus’ second major work, Algeria
is portrayed silently. Oran, the coastal city where the story takes
place, is “ugly. It has a smug placid air and you need time to discover
what it is that makes it different from so many business centers in
other parts of the world” (LP 3) It is a town of lack, it has an
indistinct view that refuses differentiation. Its meaning in the text
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derives only from absence and its inability to differentiate itself. This
inability and this lack that puts Oran in line with all other business
centers around the world gives the reader the impression that it is
not too bad. Colonialism, that is. It is “A town without pigeons,
without any trees or gardens, where you never hear the beat of wings
or the rustle of leaves” (3) Its elements are deadening, and the
citizens are perfect for this town. They are bored, habitually
wandering through life, missing of passion and spirit. They lack
mindfulness and personhood as they wander silently in this place of
non-differentiation. Habits dominate the environment that convinces
these wandering lacks that this world has meaning, that this city
encompasses a future. Camus’ narrative strategy offers the reader a
privileged perspective that can sufficiently distinguish this fullness
that can diagnose the lack and decipher the loss from what should
be. He stands within yet beyond the functioning of this society, and
as a result Camus, here, holds the power of differentiation, not the
reader. The reader cannot have an authentic experience with the
landscape, because the narrator has already and can only make these
distinctions, and we must read with this power in mind. Such a
positioning raises the question of authorial intention and of the
limitation of possible readings, of whether we can trust Camus.
Looking back upon this work we must read these aspects of his early
work historically, written by an author both the product of, and
collaborator with, French colonialism.
Under Camus’ guide one can too easily point to the name Oran
in La Peste, and Algeria in the text generally, as a generalizable
signifier, one that can be substituted for any other bland coastal town
anywhere else. Yet such depictions raise suspicion as to Camus’
relationship with Algeria. David Carroll in his defense of Camus’
portrayal of Oran states, “The city depicted in The Plague shares little
with it except its name, geographic location, and general physical
characteristics.” (53) He argues that readers should disregard the city
as any possible representation of Algeria so as not to place Camus
within the tradition of French colonialist writers. While Camus
attempts to present in La Peste an allegory displaying the limits,
breadth, and sometimes refusal of political resistance even when the
disease being resisted continues to spread, one also cannot ignore
other political positions at play within the text. Where La Peste has
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1 See The Death of the Author and From Work to Text both essays can be found in
Barthes, Roland. Image Music Text. London: Fontana Press. 1977. Print.
2 See: Selected Political Writings. Ed. Jonathan H. King. London: Methuen & Co.
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encompass the Arab and Berber population of Algeria. Pied-noirs will be referred to
separately.
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stance on the issue of freedom, however, one must look at his literary
and political writings as well as his upbringing and position as a pied-
noir to determine whether this notion functions in the same way all
throughout his work, whether there can be a stabilized notion of
freedom in Camus, and to determine whether his experience as a
pied-noir can accurately be described as French.
As Camus began to write about the politics of Algeria and
colonialism his literary work was undergoing a change where
Algerians and the burgeoning war were infiltrating his work,
provoking yet unforeseen encounters that deserve specific analysis.
Politically, his notion of freedom played a particularly important role
as the war was underway in defending the right for pied-noirs to live
in Algeria after colonialism. His position raises questions as to
whether this application of the concept was simply a colonialist
move or whether his situation as a pied-noir differentiates him from
the privileged French colonialist position. Camus, himself, was born
in Algeria to a French father and a mother of Spanish origin, and his
childhood was far from privileged. In Herbert R. Lottman’s
biography Camus we see a lack of privilege surrounding the Camus
family and their life in Algeria. (1979) Albert and his family lived in a
mixed French and Muslim neighborhood in Belcourt and were
extremely poor, his mom illiterate, his dad dying when Albert was
young. While this is not to say he did not experience an ethnic based
European privilege, he definitely did not experience any financial or
capitalist gains from French colonialism. Further, his political
writings and views, while complex, directly critique French
colonialism and the inequalities placed upon the Arab and Berber
populations, and as we will see in L’Hôte he did not align pied-noir
identity with French identity.
While one should question Camus’ support towards some
French involvement in a postcolonial Algeria, to accept Apter’s point
one would need to argue for the greater truth of his early writings
like L’Étranger and La Peste along with his political writings over and
against the developing trajectory of his literary writings. While one
cannot deny that individual freedom in works like L’Étranger and La
Peste stand on top of an Algerian landscape, wasting the possibilities
available, referring only to a French or a pied-noir perspective, the
later short stories dramatically focus on the differences between pied-
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noirs and the French and the Arabs and Berbers. As we will see in
L’Hôte and in La Femme adultère, encounters emerge where complex
identities are thrust into the foreground and any notion of freedom
from a French colonialist position is pushed well beyond its limits.
The freedom from the earlier works is a differentiation from social
ideology, a denouncing of meaning in the world while affirming life.
Yet the notion of freedom that emerges in the later works is one that
falters in the colonial situation that can never be outside of the
tension and conflict in French-Algeria, where the Arab characters
display and confront the limitations of any concept of freedom.
Apter’s quote, while sweeping, raises the important question as to
who is welcome within Camus’ early notion of freedom and whether
this notion can be read as a colonialist notion, but it neglects the
shifts that can be seen in the later literary works.
Camus’ concept of freedom, philosophically, is one he felt must
be continually revisited, protected, and reclaimed yet it must not be
confused with complete and total freedom beyond humanism that
disregards life. Although Camus adamantly supported freedom he
certainly did not support lawlessness or a Hobbesian state of nature.
Freedom, for Camus, comes the result of a move away from any
meaning attributed to the world, and once one takes such a stance
one affirms other possibilities beyond the ideology of society. Once
one rejects meaning in the world one must too reject suicide or death
as a form of escape. Freedom, as an acceptance of the absurd or the
lack of meaning in the world, is for Camus an affirmation of life
despite the meaninglessness of the world. Camus places humanism
at the heart of his philosophy where he values life most since
accepting the absurd and establishing freedom develops out of
personal experience. “But it is obvious that absurdism hereby admits
that human life is the only necessary good since it is precisely life
that makes this encounter possible and since, without life, the
absurdist wager would have no basis.” (Camus, RBL 6) Camus’
thought depends upon the centrality of life for any analysis and
develops out of an analysis of interiority and experience. Any call to
freedom, then, must not impose on life or support the destruction of
life. For it is humanism, before the absurd and beyond freedom, that
supports Camus’ philosophy. Camus states that every rebel, and the
acceptance of the absurd, opposes oppression, pleading for and
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affirming life. “The freedom he claims, he claims for all; the freedom
he refuses, he forbids everyone to enjoy.” (284) A rebellion as a move
against the norms of justice that have become unfair must affirm
freedom and justice for everyone. Following this analysis it becomes
clear how Camus could support decolonisation but not Algerian
independence given that the takeover by the F.L.N. would
immediately forbid pied-noirs from living in Algeria, a stance that
neglects what Camus thinks of as their freedom, and the tactics they
used to fight the French military consisted of assassinations and
planting bombs in French dominated public spaces. The link that
Camus upholds between freedom, justice, and humanism is one that
understands the necessary limitations that must be had upon
freedom so that life is, according to Camus, justly preserved.
To follow Apter at the point where Camus’ freedom is a French
colonialist notion neglects an issue extremely important to Camus--
that the pied-noirs can continue to live in Algeria after independence.
With humanism underlying Camus’ philosophy his stance against
the F.L.N. was a stance against what we today call “terrorism” and
guerilla war tactics. Camus felt that the F.L.N. did not value life or
freedom for all. Instead he felt that they followed a notion of justice
at the expense of freedom and human life. Camus makes this point
when he states that the notion of freedom has been mistakenly
conceived and inappropriately thrown out since Marx, leading to a
general distrust of freedom itself, a stance suggesting the unlinking
of justice and freedom. “For even if society were suddenly
transformed and became decent and comfortable for all, it would still
be a barbarous state unless freedom triumphed.” (Camus, RRD, 90)
Freedom must still be affirmed even after any revolution, and the
relationship between justice, freedom, and humanism must be
upheld. Any notion of justice for Camus, even when the struggle can
be legitimized, should not be defended if it on any level impinges on
humanism and freedom. “The current motto for all of us can only be
this: without giving up anything on the plane of justice, yield nothing
on the plane of freedom.” (93) For Camus Algerian independence
and the resistance movement of the F.L.N. is founded upon a notion
of justice that impinges on this freedom and humanism. In his essay
Bread and Freedom and throughout The Rebel, freedom is the concern
of the oppressed, yet this fight for the oppressed, especially in
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avec le F.L.N. ne peuvent plus ignorer, devant les précisions du F.L.N., que cela
signifie l’indépendance de l’Algérie dirigée par les chefs militaires les plus
implacables de l’insurrection, c’est-a-dire l’éviction de 1,200,000 Européens d’Algérie
et l’humiliation de millions de Français avec les risques que cette humiliation
comporte.” (212, Political Writings, Avant-Propos to Actuelles III)
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the era of late French colonialism and the difficulty in securing firm
meaning of the story places it at the forefront of Camus studies. It is
one of the most culturally sensitive works by Camus where an Arab
character is represented in light of the unstable political situation of
late colonialism, and the tension caused by the resistance movement
can be felt at every stage in the story.
The story begins when, after days of isolation due to a
snowstorm, a French gendarme brings an Arab Algerian who has
been arrested for murdering his cousin and taken from his village by
the French, to Daru, a pied-noir schoolteacher, so that the Arab can
stay all night in Daru’s schoolhouse and be delivered to the French
jailhouse the next day. Daru must house a potential murderer alone
since the French gendarme Balducci must get back to his post given
that the village, and the Algerians in general, are beginning to form a
resistance movement that could attack at any time. Daru, however,
does not want follow his orders. The difficulty Daru faces reflects
perfectly in his location and the setting of the story. While Daru is
conflicted about his own identity and role in the colonial situation,
his isolated locale no longer keeps him clear of such dynamics, and
he is unhappy to have been visited by Balducci and the Arab
prisoner. He tries to stand as outside as he can while still being
completely inside. He hides from the colonial situation both
personally and physically, resisting complete identification with
either the French or the Algerians. He lives far away from any
colonial presence and would rather stay up on his schoolhouse away
from any action. The encounters in the story reflect Daru’s divided
identity, how he can neither accept the Arab crime or the French
treatment of the Algerians, and how he must face his position within
the Algerian War. He must confront his own stance on colonialism
and question where his duties lie.
When the Arab and Balducci arrive, the Arab is brought to Daru
hands tied, “His eyes were dark and full of fever...the whole face had
a restless and rebellious look that struck Daru.” ( Camus, LH 29)
Daru immediately experiences the Arab as animality, with feverish
eyes, untamed. In the eyes of Daru, the Arab is both beast, a wild
animal who killed a family member and may kill Daru throughout
the night since he must stay in Daru’s schoolhouse, and also a
calculating human, potentially of the Algerian resistance but who
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many Arab and Berber characters are a threat to Janine as they sit
back and observe her behavior. The Arabs and Berbers here
potentially catalogue the dark secrets of the French, a common trope
in colonial literature, seeing things in the French that they cannot see
in themselves. They are servants and travelers who seem to always
have close but suspicious interactions with Janine and her husband
Marcel. More importantly they represent the failure of the constant
state of Janine’s need to become what she is needed to be as well as
the aspects of Janine that can never be captured in what others need
her to be.
Emily Apter states that Camus’ literature dissolves the contours
of Algeria in a projection wall of the European mind, where the Arab
characters and landscape can only represent psychological aspects of
the French characters in the story. They have no identity of their
own. While Apter makes a good point to address the Arabs and
Berbers in La Femme Adultère, they also represent more than just
projections of Janine’s mind. They represent the possibility of calling
Janine’s complete life and identity into question. They problematize
French colonial stability in this story, and to assume Camus is one of
these French characters is to misread the nuance of identity. To read
the Arabs and Berbers simply as stick figures or props for the French
imagination here neglects the power of Camus’ writing. While Apter
has a point to question the face-value representation of the Arabs and
Berbers in the story, upon scrutiny one opens up a power that they
hold as well as a critique of French occupation of Algeria. The focus
here is on the fragility of the French and the problematic encounters
had with the native population and the land. With the Algerian War
again in the backdrop of the story, the Arab and Berber characters
force questions about what it means to be French in the age of late
colonialism.
The first acknowledgment of Arabs in La Femme Adultère is one
of suspicion: “The bus was full of Arabs pretending to sleep,
shrouded in their burnooses.” (Camus, LFA 3) What we learn about
Janine, and why this observation is pertinent, is that when she is not
needed by others she immediately becomes suspicious of them. We
learn that her own relationship is one where she is made to feel that
she exists only for Marcel. “By so often making her aware that she
existed for him he made her exist in reality. No, she was not alone…”
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leave and thought of her little apartment.” (8) From this point
forward in the story Janine cannot escape confrontation with this
crack and absence in herself, from the fact that her relationship does
not fulfill her, and that something is missing in who she has been
made to be. From here Janine has her orgasmic integrative encounter
with herself through nature, this reclamation of herself, before
returning back to Marcel’s side crying where she tells him that there
is nothing to worry about. Janine can no longer participate in her
marriage without facing the complexity of her identity, and her
notion of Algeria will never be the same.
The Arabs here hold the power to undermine the French, and
they provoke fragility in the French, highlighting their incomplete
identities and how out of place they are. By positioning them as such
Camus reminds us that the Arabs did not need the French, and that
their gaze holds power over the French despite being subjected to the
ills of colonialism. They hang in the background holding power,
exposing the ills of colonialism. The Arabs are not simply controlled
and dominated products of the French imagination.
Camus Today
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Works Cited
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