The question of guilt and resonsibility in Pierre Assouline's 'The Client'
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.18778/0208-6107.27.06Keywords:
guilt, responsibility, conscience, communication, dialogueAbstract
This paper is a reflection on the problem of communicating and judging individual guilt, based on Pierre Assouline’s novel The Client – a story of a woman who during the war denounced a Jewish family to the police. Assouline’s narrative, structured as a first-person inquiry about the past, brings about a series of questions concerning individual responsibility, the need to settle the past, and the rights to judge others’ decisions and actions from the past. Arguing for the importance of public dialogue in settling the past, the author of the article discusses Hannah Arendt’s concept of the responsibility of conscience.
References
Arendt, Hannah, Myślenie, tłum. H. Buczyńska-Garewicz, Czytelnik, Warszawa 1991.
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Arystoteles, Etyka nikomachejska, tłum. D. Gromska, [w:] idem, Dzieła wszystkie, t. V, Wydawnictwo Naukowe PWN, Warszawa 1996.
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Assouline, Pierre, Klientka, tłum. J. Cichowska, Noir sur Blanc, Warszawa 1998.
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