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Primo Levi

The Austere Humanist

by Joseph Farrell (Volume editor)
©2004 Conference proceedings 220 Pages

Summary

Primo Levi has been identified in the public mind as the supreme witness to the barbarism that was the Nazi Holocaust but he was ambivalent about having that role thrust upon him. He also wished to be judged as a writer who, in addition to the autobiographical works on his experiences in the death camps, wrote poetry, produced volumes of sci-fi stories, authored novels and contributed critical essays to newspapers on a range of topics and writers. No one has the right to ignore or downplay the ‘testimony’ Primo Levi offered, but it is time to examine the wider vision inherent in his work and to explore the tradition in which he operated.
Levi was one of the great wisdom writers of his age, whose ethical authority, somewhat to his own embarrassment, was accepted in many fields. Several contributors to this collection of essays see him as a proponent of Enlightenment values, or as heir to a longer Humanist tradition. Even after enduring Auschwitz, he held fast to a notion of the dignity of the human person, and no man did more to re-establish, however quizzically, the secular basis for such beliefs. His overall standing as writer is the subject of this book.

Details

Pages
220
Year
2004
ISBN (Softcover)
9783039100699
Language
English
Keywords
Levi, Primo Primo Levi Holocaust Auschwitz Autobiography """At an Uncertain Hour""" Rossi, Francesco """If this is a Man""" Aufsatzsammlung
Published
Oxford, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt/M., New York, Wien, 2004. 220 pp.

Biographical notes

Joseph Farrell (Volume editor)

The Editor: Joseph Farrell is Professor of Italian Studies at the University of Strathclyde. He has written a biography of Dario Fo and a critical study of Leonardo Sciascia and has translated many Italian novels and plays.

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