Résumé
“Threatened by fanatics, censored by cowards, freethinkers on all continents continue to fight on all fronts to ensure the survival of an enlightened world. And the right to commit blasphemy plays a central role in their struggle.”
Caroline Fourest
In the overwhelming emotional aftermath of the terrorist attack against Charlie Hebdo in Paris, Caroline Fourest reaches those who refused to “be Charlie” in the name of “responsibility”, or concerns about “offending” or being seen as “islamophobic”.
In this ruthless and pedagogical analysis, Caroline Fourest looks into debates on freedom of speech. She also warns us about the risks associated with the globalization of bullying. She puts into perspective the breaking point between French secularism and Anglo-Saxon relativism, between the right to commit blasphemy and the calls for hatred, between Charlie and Dieudonné, and between laughing about terrorism and laughing with terrorists.
Auteur
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Caroline Fourest est essayiste. On lui doit une œuvre importante (de Frère Tariq au Génie de la laïcité en passant par La tentation obscurantiste et La dernière utopie). Son premier film de fiction, « Sœurs d’armes », sera en salles le 9 octobre.
Auteur(s) : Caroline Fourest
Caractéristiques
Auteur(s) : Caroline Fourest
Publication : 1 décembre 2015
Support(s) : Livre numérique eBook [ePub]
Protection(s) : DRM (ePub)
Taille(s) : 381 ko (ePub)
EAN13 Livre numérique eBook [ePub] : 9782246861690