Améry and Primo Levi: the intellectual’s experience in the Lager and the duty of bear witness

In this article, it is intended to understand the conception of the intellectual in Jean Améry’s and Levi’s thought. This conception is understood in connection with the idea of the need of testifying the unnamable experience of the life in the Lager. Both have different conceptions on the reach and...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Pedro Miguel Rodrigues Panarra
Format: Article
Language:Portuguese
Published: Universidade Nove de Julho 2009-06-01
Series:Prisma Jurídico
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www4.uninove.br/ojs/index.php/prisma/article/view/1610
Description
Summary:In this article, it is intended to understand the conception of the intellectual in Jean Améry’s and Levi’s thought. This conception is understood in connection with the idea of the need of testifying the unnamable experience of the life in the Lager. Both have different conceptions on the reach and the load of the testimony, in reason also of the different relationships they establish with the public space. The ideas discussed in this article are about exclusively the two intellectuals’ conception regarding the limits of the spirit and the human condition in Lager, like Améry designates that empty space in that the sense gets lost. They are not valid for any type of intervention in the public space.
ISSN:1677-2768
1983-9286