Albert Camus

Description

Albert Camus (1913–1960) was a journalist, editor and editorialist, playwright and director, novelist and author of short stories, political essayist and activist—and arguably, although he came to deny it, a philosopher. He ignored or opposed systematic philosophy, had little faith in rationalism, asserted rather than argued many of his main ideas, presented others in metaphors, was preoccupied with immediate and personal experience, and brooded over such questions as the meaning of life in the face of death. Although he forcefully separated himself from existentialism, Camus posed one of the twentieth century's best-known existentialist questions, which launches The Myth of Sisyphus: “There is only one really serious philosophical question, and that is suicide” (MS, 3). And his philosophy of the absurd has left us with a striking image of the human fate: Sisyphus endlessly pushing his rock up the mountain only to see it roll back down each time he gains the top. Camus's philosophy found political expression in The Rebel, which along with his newspaper editorials, political essays, plays, and fiction earned him a reputation as a great moralist. It also embroiled him in conflict with his friend, Jean-Paul Sartre, provoking the major political-intellectual divide of the Cold-War era as Camus and Sartre became, respectively, the leading intellectual voices of the anti-Communist and pro-Communist left. Furthermore, in posing and answering urgent philosophical questions of the day, Camus articulated a critique of religion and of the Enlightenment and all its projects, including Marxism. In 1957 he won the Nobel Prize for literature. He died in a car accident in January, 1960, at the age of 46.

He's been gone six decades but after 2020, it feels like French literary great Albert Camus matters more than ever. Last year began with tributes for the 60th anniversary of the French existentialist icon's premature death in a car crash. Then came Covid-19. And readers locked down the world over dusted off that go-to guide, “The Plague”, to make sense of the randomly unexpected. But it's not just "The Plague" that is timeless. In all of the Nobel literature laureate's plays, essays and novels, protagonists struggle to understand where they belong in times of upheaval. Just look at today. We live in an age of alienation, identity politics, the loss of a sense of self. A bit like in "The Stranger”.

What would Camus have made of 2021 and the age of digital discourse, where powered by tribal echo chambers, we judge and sometimes sentence our peers? When Covid-19 is long behind us, "The Fall" will still be worth re-reading.

In this SDG, we will read 10 novels/plays/essays of Camus, discuss three cycles of his writings; Absurd, Revolt and Love and discuss his thoughts and philosophy of life.

Weekly Topics

  1. Brief introduction of Camus,his differences with Sartre and play Caligula 1938

  2. The Stranger 1942

  3. The Myth of Sisyphus 1942

  4. The Plague 1947

  5. The Plague

  6. The Misunderstanding 1943 and The State of Siege 1948

  7. The Rebel 1951

  8. the Rebel

  9. The Fall 1956

  10. The First Man - incomplete published 1994