Neither Victims nor Executioners
Neither
Victims nor Executioners
(French:
Ni Victimes, ni
bourreaux) was a series of essays by Albert
Camus that were serialized in Combat,
the daily newspaper of the French
Resistance, in November 1946. In the essays he
discusses violence and murder and the impact these have on those who
perpetrate, suffer, or observe.
Neither
Victims nor Executioners is split
into eight sections:
- The Century of Fear
- Saving Lives
- The Contradictions of Socialism
- The Betrayed Revolution
- International Democracy and Dictatorship
- The World is Changing Fast
- A New Social Contract
- Toward Dialogue
The
essays were translated into English by Dwight
Macdonald and published in the July–August
1947 issue of politics. This version is available via England's pacifist Peace Pledge Union.
It appeared in separate book form in 1960 with an introduction by Waldo
Frank. The essay was also reprinted in
the book Between Hell and Reason: Essays from the Resistance Newspaper
"Combat".
References
·
Albert Camus, Alexandre
de Gramont Between
Hell and Reason: Essays from the Resistance Newspaper Combat, 1944–1947
Wesleyan University Press, 1991 ISBN 0819551899.
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