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Albert Camus
(1913—1960)
Albert Camus was a French-Algerian journalist, playwright,
novelist, philosophical essayist, and Nobel laureate. Though he was
neither by advanced training nor profession a philosopher, he
nevertheless made important, forceful contributions to a wide range
of issues in moral philosophy in his novels, reviews, articles,
essays, and speeches—from terrorism and political violence to
suicide and the death penalty. He is often described as an
existentialist writer, though he himself disavowed the label. He
began his literary career as a political journalist and as an
actor, director, and playwright in his native Algeria. Later, while
living in occupied France during WWII, he became active in the
Resistance and from 1944-47 served as editor-in-chief of the
newspaper Combat. By mid-century, based
on the strength of his three novels (The Stranger, The Plague, and
The Fall) and two book-length philosophical essays (The Myth of
Sisyphus and The Rebel), he had achieved an international
reputation and readership. It was in these works that he introduced
and developed the twin philosophical ideas—the concept of the
Absurd and the notion of Revolt—that made him famous. These are the
ideas that people immediately think of when they hear the name
Albert Camus spoken today. The Absurd can be defined as a
metaphysical tension or opposition that results from the presence
of human consciousness—with its ever-pressing demand for order and
meaning in life—in an essentially meaningless and indifferent
universe. Camus considered the Absurd to be a fundamental and even
defining characteristic of the modern human condition. The notion
of Revolt refers to both a path of resolved action and a state of
mind. It can take extreme forms such as terrorism or a reckless and
unrestrained egoism (both of which are rejected by Camus), but
basically, and in simple terms, it consists of an attitude of
heroic defiance or resistance to whatever oppresses human beings.
In awarding Camus its prize for literature in 1957, the Nobel Prize
committee cited his persistent efforts to “illuminate the problem
of the human conscience in our time.” He was honored by his own
generation, and is still admired today, for being a writer of
conscience and a champion of imaginative literature as a vehicle of
philosophical insight and moral truth. He was at the height of his
career—at work on an autobiographical novel, planning new projects
for theatre, film, and television, and still seeking a solution to
the lacerating political turmoil in his homeland—when he died
tragically in an automobile accident in January 1960.
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