Image for Introducing Camus

Introducing Camus

Part of the Introducing... series
See all formats and editions

Albert Camus, winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1957, always refused the existentialist label with which he is usually associated.

For Camus, the world was 'absurd', without purpose, leading only unto death, yet all the more invigorating precisely because of this.

Long associated with Left-Bank intellectuals, Camus' real emotional centre was always his native Algeria and the poverty of his youth.

This has become even clearer with the publication of his posthumous novel "The First Man", which has catapulted Camus back into the public eye after years of excommunication by the Left for his 'un-radical' views during the Algerian war. "Introducing Camus" portrays a man who was an intellectual in the tradition of the great French humanists, a Resistance fighter during World War II, and also a great sensualist for whom sun, sea, sex, football and theatre were the answer to life's absurdity.

Read More
Title Unavailable: Out of Print
Product Details
Icon Books Ltd
1840468475 / 9781840468472
Paperback
843.914
01/11/2007
United Kingdom
English
175 p. : ill.
21 cm
Undergraduate Learn More
Originally published: New York: Totem, 1998.