
.
.Albert
CAMUS
Albert Camus
(7 November 1913 – 4 January 1960) was a French Algerian author,
philosopher, and journalist who was awarded the Nobel Prize for
Literature in 1957. He was a key philosopher of the 20th-century
and his most famous work is the novel L'Étranger (The
Stranger).
In 1949, Camus founded the Group
for International Liaisons within the Revolutionary Union
Movement, which was a group opposed to some tendencies of the
surrealistic movement of André Breton. Camus was the
second-youngest recipient of the Nobel Prize for Literature -
after Rudyard Kipling - when he became the first African-born
writer to receive the award. He is the shortest-lived of any
literature laureate to date, having died in an automobile accident
just over two years after receiving the award.
He is often cited as a proponent
of existentialism, the philosophy that he was associated with
during his own lifetime, but Camus himself rejected this
particular label. In an interview in 1945, Camus rejected any
ideological associations: "No, I am not an existentialist. Sartre
and I are always surprised to see our names linked..."
Specifically, his views
contributed to the rise of the more current philosophy known as
absurdism. He wrote in his essay The Rebel that his whole
life was devoted to opposing the philosophy of nihilism while
still delving deeply into individual freedom.
Early years
Albert Camus was born
on 7 November 1913 in Dréan (then known as Mondovi) in French
Algeria to a Pied-Noir settler family. His mother was of Spanish
extraction and was half-deaf. Pied-Noir was a term used to refer
to colonists of French Algeria until Algerian independence in
1962. His father Lucien, a poor agricultural worker, died in the
Battle of the Marne in 1914 during World War I, while serving as a
member of the Zouave infantry regiment. Camus lived in poor
conditions during his childhood in the Belcourt section of
Algiers. In 1923, he was accepted into the lycée and eventually to
the University of Algiers. However, he contracted tuberculosis in
1930, which put an end to his football activities (he had been a
goalkeeper for the university team) and forced him to make his
studies a part-time pursuit. He took odd jobs including private
tutor, car parts clerk and work for the Meteorological Institute.
He completed his licence de philosophie (BA) in 1935; in
May 1936, he successfully presented his thesis on Plotinus,
Néo-Platonisme et Pensée Chrétienne, for his diplôme
d'études supérieures (roughly equivalent to an M.A. thesis).
Camus joined the French Communist
Party in the Spring of 1935 seeing it as a way to "fight
inequalities between Europeans and 'natives' in Algeria." He did
not suggest he was a Marxist or that he had read Das Kapital,
but did write that "[w]e might see communism as a springboard and
asceticism that prepares the ground for more spiritual
activities". In 1936, the independence-minded Algerian Communist
Party (PCA) was founded. Camus joined the activities of the
Algerian People's Party (Le Parti du Peuple Algérien),
which got him into trouble with his Communist party comrades. As a
result, he was denounced as a Trotskyite and expelled from the
party in 1937. Camus went on to be associated with the French
anarchist movement.
The anarchist Andre
Prudhommeaux first introduced him at a meeting in 1948 of the
Cercle des Etudiants Anarchistes (Anarchist Student Circle) as a
sympathiser who was familiar with anarchist thought. Camus went on
to write for anarchist publications such as Le Libertaire,
La révolution Proletarienne and Solidaridad Obrera
(the organ of the anarcho-syndicalist CNT). Camus also stood with
the anarchists when they expressed support for the uprising of
1953 in East Germany. He again stood with the anarchists in 1956,
first with the workers’ uprising in Poznan, Poland, and then later
in the year with the Hungarian Revolution.
In 1934, he married Simone Hie, a
morphine addict, but the marriage ended as a consequence of
infidelities on both sides. In 1935, he founded Théâtre du
Travail — "Worker's Theatre" — (renamed Théâtre de l'Equipe
("Team's Theatre") in 1937), which survived until 1939. From 1937
to 1939 he wrote for a socialist paper, Alger-Républicain,
and his work included an account of the peasants who lived in
Kabylie in poor conditions, which apparently cost him his job.
From 1939 to 1940, he briefly wrote for a similar paper,
Soir-Republicain. He was rejected by the French army because
of his tuberculosis.
In 1940, Camus
married Francine Faure, a pianist and mathematician. Although he
loved Francine, he had argued passionately against the institution
of marriage, dismissing it as unnatural. Even after Francine gave
birth to twins, Catherine and Jean, on 5 September 1945, he
continued to joke wearily to friends that he was not cut out for
marriage. Camus conducted numerous affairs, particularly an
irregular and eventually public affair with the Spanish-born
actress Maria Casares. In the same year, Camus began to work for
Paris-Soir magazine. In the first stage of World War II,
the so-called Phony War stage, Camus was a pacifist. However, he
was in Paris to witness how the Wehrmacht took over. On 15
December 1941, Camus witnessed the execution of Gabriel Péri, an
event that Camus later said crystallized his revolt against the
Germans. Afterwards he moved to Bordeaux alongside the rest of the
staff of Paris-Soir. In the same year he finished his first
books, The Stranger and The Myth of Sisyphus. He
returned briefly to Oran, Algeria in 1942.
Literary career
During the war Camus joined the
French Resistance cell Combat, which published an
underground newspaper of the same name. This group worked against
the Nazis, and in it Camus assumed the nom de guerre
"Beauchard". Camus became the paper's editor in 1943, and when the
Allies liberated Paris Camus reported on the last of the fighting.
He was one of the few French editors to publicly express
opposition to the use of the atomic bomb in Hiroshima soon after
the event on 8 August 1945. He eventually resigned from Combat
in 1947, when it became a commercial paper. It was then that he
became acquainted with Jean-Paul Sartre.
After the war, Camus began
frequenting the Café de Flore on the Boulevard
Saint-Germain in Paris with Sartre and others. He also toured the
United States to lecture about French thinking. Although he leaned
left, politically, his strong criticisms of Communist doctrine did
not win him any friends in the Communist parties and eventually
also alienated Sartre.
In 1949 his tuberculosis returned
and he lived in seclusion for two years. In 1951 he published
The Rebel, a philosophical analysis of rebellion and
revolution which made clear his rejection of communism. The book
upset many of his colleagues and contemporaries in France and led
to the final split with Sartre. The dour reception depressed him
and he began instead to translate plays.
Camus's first significant
contribution to philosophy was his idea of the absurd, the result
of our desire for clarity and meaning within a world and condition
that offers neither, which he explained in The Myth of Sisyphus
and incorporated into many of his other works, such as The
Stranger and The Plague. Despite the split from his
"study partner", Sartre, some still argue that Camus falls into
the existentialist camp. However, he rejected that label himself
in his essay Enigma and elsewhere (see: The Lyrical and
Critical Essays of Albert Camus). The current confusion may
still arise, as many recent applications of existentialism have
much in common with many of Camus's practical ideas (see:
Resistance, Rebellion, and Death). However, the personal
understanding he had of the world (e.g. "a benign indifference",
in The Stranger), and every vision he had for its progress
(e.g. vanquishing the "adolescent furies" of history and society,
in The Rebel) undoubtedly set him apart.
In the 1950s Camus devoted his
efforts to human rights. In 1952 he resigned from his work for
UNESCO when the UN accepted Spain as a member under the leadership
of General Franco. In 1953 he criticized Soviet methods to crush a
workers' strike in East Berlin. In 1956 he protested against
similar methods in Poland (protests in Poznań) and the Soviet
repression of the Hungarian revolution in October.
He maintained his pacifism and
resistance to capital punishment anywhere in the world. One of his
most significant contributions to the movement against capital
punishment was an essay collaboration with Arthur Koestler, the
writer, intellectual and founder of the League Against Capital
Punishment.
When the Algerian War began in
1954 it presented a moral dilemma for Camus. He identified with
pied-noirs, and defended the French government on the grounds that
the revolt in Algeria was really an integral part of the 'new Arab
imperialism' led by Egypt and an 'anti-Western' offensive
orchestrated by Russia to 'encircle Europe' and 'isolate the
United States'. Although favouring greater Algerian autonomy or
even federation, though not full-scale independence, he believed
that the pied-noirs and Arabs could co-exist. During the war he
advocated civil truce that would spare the civilians, which was
rejected by both sides who regarded it as foolish. Behind the
scenes, he began to work for imprisoned Algerians who faced the
death penalty.
From 1955 to 1956 Camus wrote for
L'Express. In 1957 he was awarded the Nobel Prize in
literature "for his important literary production, which with
clear-sighted earnestness illuminates the problems of the human
conscience in our times", not for his novel The Fall,
published the previous year, but for his writings against capital
punishment in the essay Réflexions sur la Guillotine. When
he spoke to students at the University of Stockholm, he defended
his apparent inactivity in the Algerian question and stated that
he was worried about what might happen to his mother, who still
lived in Algeria. This led to further ostracism by French
left-wing intellectuals.
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