La Méditerranée, la mer en allée avec le soleil ?

The Mediterranean celebrated by Albert Camus, Philippe Sollers and Jean-Daniel Pollet is the result of a metaphysical questioning that essentially ignores real people, the landscape serving as a backdrop for the representation of the tangency of the world of individuals, in the mode of tragedy and w...

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Main Author: Jean-Michel Devésa
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Université du Sud Toulon-Var 2021-06-01
Series:Babel: Littératures Plurielles
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/babel/11965
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author Jean-Michel Devésa
author_facet Jean-Michel Devésa
author_sort Jean-Michel Devésa
collection DOAJ
description The Mediterranean celebrated by Albert Camus, Philippe Sollers and Jean-Daniel Pollet is the result of a metaphysical questioning that essentially ignores real people, the landscape serving as a backdrop for the representation of the tangency of the world of individuals, in the mode of tragedy and within the framework of an atemporal approach, so much so that this Mediterranean, which is proclaimed to be a focus of multiple connections, turns out to be exalted by its authors and this filmmaker as the sea of the Greeks, and not as that of the peoples who live along its shores. A Mediterranean more concerned with humans and the social relationships in which they are caught up permeates Jean Pélégri’s work.
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spelling doaj.art-24542bdf98b94007ad447473179d0ebf2022-12-22T00:21:24ZengUniversité du Sud Toulon-VarBabel: Littératures Plurielles1277-78972263-47462021-06-0143819910.4000/babel.11965La Méditerranée, la mer en allée avec le soleil ?Jean-Michel DevésaThe Mediterranean celebrated by Albert Camus, Philippe Sollers and Jean-Daniel Pollet is the result of a metaphysical questioning that essentially ignores real people, the landscape serving as a backdrop for the representation of the tangency of the world of individuals, in the mode of tragedy and within the framework of an atemporal approach, so much so that this Mediterranean, which is proclaimed to be a focus of multiple connections, turns out to be exalted by its authors and this filmmaker as the sea of the Greeks, and not as that of the peoples who live along its shores. A Mediterranean more concerned with humans and the social relationships in which they are caught up permeates Jean Pélégri’s work.http://journals.openedition.org/babel/11965metaphysicsrelationGreeksacredtragicreal man
spellingShingle Jean-Michel Devésa
La Méditerranée, la mer en allée avec le soleil ?
Babel: Littératures Plurielles
metaphysics
relation
Greek
sacred
tragic
real man
title La Méditerranée, la mer en allée avec le soleil ?
title_full La Méditerranée, la mer en allée avec le soleil ?
title_fullStr La Méditerranée, la mer en allée avec le soleil ?
title_full_unstemmed La Méditerranée, la mer en allée avec le soleil ?
title_short La Méditerranée, la mer en allée avec le soleil ?
title_sort la mediterranee la mer en allee avec le soleil
topic metaphysics
relation
Greek
sacred
tragic
real man
url http://journals.openedition.org/babel/11965
work_keys_str_mv AT jeanmicheldevesa lamediterraneelamerenalleeaveclesoleil