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Sartre Recounts a Childhood Story: The Case of Genet

Date Published:

2 June, 2013

Abstract:

In Saint Genet, Actor and Martyr, Sartre tells the story of the writer Jean Genet. He does it from the presuppositions he developed in his major philosophical book, Being and Nothingness, where he presented man as a free being acting in specific situations but always able to surmount the given by decisions of his own. Nevertheless, Sartre describes the story of the orphan Genet as it begins in childhood with the accusation of theft made by his adopted parents and by the adults of the village where he had been sent. This accusation turns out to be traumatic. Genet will actually become a thief later, and a writer of theft and crime. It thus determines his entire life. By telling this story, Sartre himself puts his basic ideas to the test, and has to admit that events which occurred in childhood influence and determine our life. Sartre the philosopher of freedom is thus challenged by Sartre the writer of existence.

 

June 2013: Rony Klein, lecturer in the Department of Romance and Latin-American Studies at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, has studied Philosophy in Paris and has completed his Ph. D. at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. He has published articles on French contemporary thought and French-Jewish contemporary thought. He is currently preparing a book, in Hebrew, on "Letter, Body, and Community: Reflections on French-Jewish Contemporary Thought." 

 

Publisher's Version

Last updated on 04/15/2020