Abstract

Michel Tournier’s “L’Impersonnalisme” provided the basis of Robinson’s philosophical meditations in chapter 4 of Friday, or the Other Island. In this paper Olivier Dubouclez shows how Robinson both repeats and transforms the impersonnalist doctrine and he claims that the philosophical achievement of the novel is not the creation of a “World without others” (Deleuze) but, on the contrary, the discovery of the other as “L’Impersonnalisme” conceives of him: a body expressing the world, like Friday’s fascinating “ostensoir de chair”, and inviting to unity and brotherhood.

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