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Catani, Damian. "Louis-Ferdinand Céline, literary genius or national pariah? Defining moral parameters for influential cultural figures, post-Charlie Hebdo." French Cultural Studies 27. (2016): 268–78. 
Added by: joachim (1/11/17, 2:34 PM)   Last edited by: joachim (1/11/17, 2:36 PM)
Resource type: Journal Article
Language: en: English
Peer reviewed
DOI: 10.1177/0957155816648089
BibTeX citation key: Catani2016
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Categories: General
Keywords: "Charlie Hebdo", Céline, France, Kulturpolitik, Literature, Religion, Satire
Creators: Catani
Collection: French Cultural Studies
Views: 4/1159
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Abstract
In January 2011 the French Minister of Culture, Frédéric Mitterrand, withdrew Louis-Ferdinand Céline from a list of canonical French authors specifically selected for a national celebration of culture. This bold decision was deeply divisive: while many welcomed Mitterrand’s intervention, a number of prominent writers, some of them Jewish, opposed it on the grounds that Céline’s unacceptable political beliefs – expressed in three anti-Semitic pamphlets and his flirtation with Nazism – should not overshadow his literary genius. In the light of this controversy, and of the rise in anti-Semitism following the Charlie Hebdo attacks of January 2015, this paper proposes Céline as a vital case study of the moral parameters a democratic nation should apply to a culturally important figure whose political views are deemed unacceptably reactionary.
  
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