Renaud Camus
Renaud Camus is a French writer and aesthete who has been identified as part of a group of French writers and thinkers some term the 'new reactionaries'.
Camus lives 'in self-imposed isolation in a 14th-Century fortress in the wilds of Gascony'.[1]
Contents
Background
In the 1960-70s, Renaud Camus had befriended left-wing intellectuals such as Louis Aragon, the famous Communist poet and founder of surrealism, and Simone De Beauvoir, a feminist and existentialist scholar. Roland Barthes, the star of the Collège de France, had written the preface to Renaud Camus' most famous novel, Tricks, the cult-classic book of gay culture.
New Reactionaries
According to the BBC journalist Hugh Schofield, Camus has been classified as a member of a group some have termed the 'neo-reactionnaires' (new reactionaries): 'a loose group of writers and thinkers' who represent a 'new intellectual force in France' challenging 'the disastrous post-1968 left-wing consensus' and seeking to 'shake up debate on issues like immigration, Islam and national identity'. Critics believe they are 'providing spurious philosophical cover for the extremism of the Front National'.[1]
Others deemed to be new reactionaries include writers Eric Zemmour and philosopher Alain Finkielkraut.[1]
Views
Support for the FN
Camus was reportedly spurned by French literary society after saying he would vote for Marine Le Pen's far-right Front National party at the last [2014] election.[1]
On immigration
Camus has reportedly argued 'there is nothing right-wing about me. But I just happen to think that today's immigration is the most important thing to have happened to France - ever'.[1]
He coined the "Great Replacement" (Grand Remplacement) theory, i.e the "colonisation" of France by Muslim immigrants from the Middle East and North Africa, which he claims threatens to "mutate" the country and its culture permanently. “The Great Replacement is very simple. You have one people, and in the space of a generation, you have a different people”. He prophetises an imminent 'civil war' people the 'indigenous French' and the 'arabo-muslim people'. [2]
Involvement in politics
He has also formed a political party, "Le Parti de l’In-nocence" and adds position statements to the party’s website on a nearly daily basis, although the party remains insignificant in election terms.
On the 2016 version of the website is a quote from Franz Fanon, a known Algerian postcolonial author, speaking of the total colonisation and domination of African peoples by European masters. The strategy used by colonisers consists of both brute force, and of the destruction of indigenous culture and values (« L'asservissement, au sens le plus rigoureux, de la population autochtone est la première nécessité. Pour cela il faut briser ses systèmes de référence ; l'expropriation, le dépouillement, la razzia, le meurtre objectif se doublent d'une mise à sac des schèmes culturels ou du moins conditionnent cette mise à sac. Le panorama social est déstructuré, les valeurs bafouées, écrasées, vidées. »). The the party seems, by pushing for the 'Grand Replacement' theory, to be using Fanon in a way that accuses Muslim migrant populations of colonising Europe in a similar way. [3]
Court case
In 2014, he was convicted for incitement to hatred (a fine of 4,000 euros) for a speech he gave in December 2010 at the "Assises internationales sur l'islamisation" (organised by Christine Tasin and Pierre cassens), in which he spoke of his theory of the 'Great Replacement'. [4] He appealed, but the sentence was reconfirmed in April 2015. [5]
Notes
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 Hugh Schofield, France shaken up by Zemmour and 'new reactionaries', BBC News, 14 December 2014
- ↑ Cheradenine Zakalwe, "France is Already in a State of War and No One Wants to Say It", Islamversuseurope, 21 August 2012. Accessed 19 September 2016.
- ↑ http://www.in-nocence.org
- ↑ [1], L'Express, 10 April 2014. Accessed 19 September 2016
- ↑ Provocation à la haine contre les musulmans: La condamnation de Renaud Camus confirmée, 20Minutes, 09 April 2015. Accessed 19 September 2016.