Simone Weil on Colonialism: An Ethic of the Other (After the Empire: The Francophone World and Postcolonial France)
by Simone Weil, J. P. Little (Editor)
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In 1931, Simone Weil read an article by Louis Roubaud in the Petit Parisien that exposed the Yen Bay massacre in Indochina. That article opened Weil's eyes, and from then until her death in exile in 1943, she cared most deeply about the French colonial situation. Weil refused to accept the contradiction between the image of France as champion of the rights of man and the reality of France's exploitation and oppression of the peoples in its territories. Weil wrote thirteen articles or letters show more about the situation, writings originally published in French journals or in French collections of her work. J. P. Little's fluid and clear translations finally introduce to English-speaking scholars and students this important element of Weil's political consciousness. show lessTags
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Born in Paris, Weil came from a highly intellectual family. After a brilliant academic career at school and university, she taught philosophy interspersed with periods of hard manual labor on farms and in factories. Throughout her life she combined sophisticated and scholarly interests with an extreme moral intensity and identification with the show more poor and oppressed. A twentieth-century Pascal (see Vol. 4), this ardently spiritual woman was a social thinker, sensitive to the crises of modern humanity. Jewish by birth, Christian by vocation, and Greek by aesthetic choice, Weil has influenced religious thinking profoundly in the years since her death. "Humility is the root of love," she said as she questioned traditional theologians and held that the apostles had badly interpreted Christ's teaching. Christianity was, she thought, to blame for the heresy of progress. During World War II, Weil starved herself to death, refusing to eat while victims of the war still suffered. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
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- Simone Weil on colonialism : an ethic of the other
- Original title
- Simone Weil on colonialism : an ethic of the other
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Classifications
- Genres
- Nonfiction, History, Politics and Government
- DDC/MDS
- 325.344 — Society, government, & culture Political science International migration and colonization English Migration to Europe
- LCC
- JV1835 .W45 — Political Science Colonies and colonization. Emigration and immigration. International migration Colonies and colonization. Emigration and Colonizing nations
- BISAC
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- 9
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- (4.00)
- Languages
- English, French
- Media
- Paper
- ISBNs
- 2



