{"title":"作为见证人和社会评论家的作家:夏洛特·德尔博1961年10月17日和1968年5月","authors":"Kathryn M Lachman","doi":"10.1353/esp.2023.0002","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"CHARLOTTE DELBO (1913–1985) is best known for her searing accounts of Auschwitz and deportation, but she also produced a rich and varied corpus of plays, poems, and essays denouncing oppression in France and beyond. This article examines two highly original yet little known works in which Delbo lends her voice to protesters in 1960s France: her eye-witness account of the demonstration of Algerians in Paris of October 17, 1961, “La septième année de la guerre d’Algérie” [The Seventh Year of the Algerian War], and her remarkable play about the student and worker movement of May 1968, La théorie et la pratique [Theory and Practice].1 Taken together, these two texts display Delbo’s range as a writer, vibrant political commitment, and determination to engage the diversity of voices in the public sphere. In examining Delbo’s writings on French protest movements of the 1960s, this article necessarily also interrogates the longstanding resistance to Delbo’s work in France, indeed, the degree to which a significant part of her work remains marginalized and neglected.2 “La septième année de la guerre d’Algérie” is still unpublished in Delbo’s archives. Jean-Jacques Vierne’s radio adaptation of La théorie et la pratique was broadcast on French national radio on October 29, 1970,3 but the play has never been staged in theaters. The script was published in 1968 by Éditions Anthropos, the same small Parisian press that brought out Henri Lefebvre’s essay on May ’68, L’irruption de Nanterrre au sommet [The Explosion: Marxism and the French Upheaval],4 and has been reprinted in a collected edition of nine plays by Delbo, Qui rapportera ces paroles (Paris: Fayard, 2013); nonetheless, it has yet to receive the critical attention it merits.5 This article seeks to counter this erasure by bringing the breadth of Delbo’s work into fuller view. It also takes up a question raised by Michael Rothberg as to the fascinating and under-acknowledged intellectual rapport between Delbo and sociologist Henri Lefebvre, whom she makes into a major protagonist in La théorie et la pratique. As documented by Lefebvre’s biog-","PeriodicalId":54063,"journal":{"name":"ESPRIT CREATEUR","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.1000,"publicationDate":"2023-03-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"The Writer as Witness and Social Critic: Charlotte Delbo on October 17, 1961, and May ’68\",\"authors\":\"Kathryn M Lachman\",\"doi\":\"10.1353/esp.2023.0002\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"CHARLOTTE DELBO (1913–1985) is best known for her searing accounts of Auschwitz and deportation, but she also produced a rich and varied corpus of plays, poems, and essays denouncing oppression in France and beyond. This article examines two highly original yet little known works in which Delbo lends her voice to protesters in 1960s France: her eye-witness account of the demonstration of Algerians in Paris of October 17, 1961, “La septième année de la guerre d’Algérie” [The Seventh Year of the Algerian War], and her remarkable play about the student and worker movement of May 1968, La théorie et la pratique [Theory and Practice].1 Taken together, these two texts display Delbo’s range as a writer, vibrant political commitment, and determination to engage the diversity of voices in the public sphere. In examining Delbo’s writings on French protest movements of the 1960s, this article necessarily also interrogates the longstanding resistance to Delbo’s work in France, indeed, the degree to which a significant part of her work remains marginalized and neglected.2 “La septième année de la guerre d’Algérie” is still unpublished in Delbo’s archives. Jean-Jacques Vierne’s radio adaptation of La théorie et la pratique was broadcast on French national radio on October 29, 1970,3 but the play has never been staged in theaters. The script was published in 1968 by Éditions Anthropos, the same small Parisian press that brought out Henri Lefebvre’s essay on May ’68, L’irruption de Nanterrre au sommet [The Explosion: Marxism and the French Upheaval],4 and has been reprinted in a collected edition of nine plays by Delbo, Qui rapportera ces paroles (Paris: Fayard, 2013); nonetheless, it has yet to receive the critical attention it merits.5 This article seeks to counter this erasure by bringing the breadth of Delbo’s work into fuller view. It also takes up a question raised by Michael Rothberg as to the fascinating and under-acknowledged intellectual rapport between Delbo and sociologist Henri Lefebvre, whom she makes into a major protagonist in La théorie et la pratique. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
夏洛特·德尔博(1913–1985)以其对奥斯威辛和驱逐出境的辛辣描述而闻名,但她也创作了丰富多样的戏剧、诗歌和散文,谴责法国及其他地区的压迫。本文考察了德尔博为20世纪60年代法国抗议者发声的两部极具原创性但鲜为人知的作品:她亲眼目睹了1961年10月17日阿尔及利亚人在巴黎的示威活动,《阿尔及利亚战争的第七年》,以及她关于1968年5月学生和工人运动的精彩戏剧,La théorie et La pratique[理论与实践]。1总之,这两篇文章展示了德尔博作为一名作家的范围、充满活力的政治承诺以及在公共领域参与各种声音的决心。在研究德尔博关于20世纪60年代法国抗议运动的著作时,这篇文章必然也质疑了德尔博作品在法国长期受到的抵制,事实上,她的大部分作品在多大程度上仍然被边缘化和忽视。1970年10月29日,让-雅克·维埃内(Jean-Jacques Vierne)的电台改编自《La théorie et La pratique》,在法国国家广播电台播出。3但该剧从未在影院上演。该剧本于1968年由Éditions Anthropos出版,这家巴黎小型出版社于1968年5月出版了亨利·列斐伏尔的文章《南特雷的爆发》(The Exploration:Marxism and The French Upheatal)4,并在德尔博的九部戏剧合集中重印(巴黎:法亚德,2013);尽管如此,它还没有得到应有的批评关注。5本文试图通过更全面地看待德尔博作品的广度来对抗这种抹杀。它还回答了迈克尔·罗斯伯格提出的一个问题,即德尔博和社会学家亨利·列斐伏尔之间迷人而不为人所知的知识分子关系,她将列斐伏尔尔塑造成了《宗教与实践》中的主要主角。正如列斐伏尔的传记所记载的那样-
The Writer as Witness and Social Critic: Charlotte Delbo on October 17, 1961, and May ’68
CHARLOTTE DELBO (1913–1985) is best known for her searing accounts of Auschwitz and deportation, but she also produced a rich and varied corpus of plays, poems, and essays denouncing oppression in France and beyond. This article examines two highly original yet little known works in which Delbo lends her voice to protesters in 1960s France: her eye-witness account of the demonstration of Algerians in Paris of October 17, 1961, “La septième année de la guerre d’Algérie” [The Seventh Year of the Algerian War], and her remarkable play about the student and worker movement of May 1968, La théorie et la pratique [Theory and Practice].1 Taken together, these two texts display Delbo’s range as a writer, vibrant political commitment, and determination to engage the diversity of voices in the public sphere. In examining Delbo’s writings on French protest movements of the 1960s, this article necessarily also interrogates the longstanding resistance to Delbo’s work in France, indeed, the degree to which a significant part of her work remains marginalized and neglected.2 “La septième année de la guerre d’Algérie” is still unpublished in Delbo’s archives. Jean-Jacques Vierne’s radio adaptation of La théorie et la pratique was broadcast on French national radio on October 29, 1970,3 but the play has never been staged in theaters. The script was published in 1968 by Éditions Anthropos, the same small Parisian press that brought out Henri Lefebvre’s essay on May ’68, L’irruption de Nanterrre au sommet [The Explosion: Marxism and the French Upheaval],4 and has been reprinted in a collected edition of nine plays by Delbo, Qui rapportera ces paroles (Paris: Fayard, 2013); nonetheless, it has yet to receive the critical attention it merits.5 This article seeks to counter this erasure by bringing the breadth of Delbo’s work into fuller view. It also takes up a question raised by Michael Rothberg as to the fascinating and under-acknowledged intellectual rapport between Delbo and sociologist Henri Lefebvre, whom she makes into a major protagonist in La théorie et la pratique. As documented by Lefebvre’s biog-
期刊介绍:
For more than forty years, L"Esprit Créateur has published studies on French and Francophone literature, film, criticism, and culture. The journal features articles representing a variety of methodologies and critical approaches. Exploring all periods of French literature and thought, L"Esprit Créateur focuses on topics that define French and Francophone Studies today.