Camus answers that the absurdity of our tragic nature is actually benevolent.
New Year’s Reading List: Books to Transform Your Sad Life|David Masciotra|January 1, 2014|DAILY BEAST
Camus did not cower from the depressing implications of his insight.
New Year’s Reading List: Books to Transform Your Sad Life|David Masciotra|January 1, 2014|DAILY BEAST
The Myth of Sisyphusby Albert Camus It all begins and ends with Camus.
New Year’s Reading List: Books to Transform Your Sad Life|David Masciotra|January 1, 2014|DAILY BEAST
But most of all, it made you decent, like Dr. Rieux in Camus's The Plague.
Tony Lewis, American, Jew, Remembered|Bernard Avishai|October 24, 2013|DAILY BEAST
For Camus, the absurdity of life is something we must acknowledge, but never stop protesting against.
Why Albert Camus Remains Controversial|Adam Kirsch|October 20, 2013|DAILY BEAST
(or catalogue of books in the college of Clermont), is handsomely noticed by Camus in the Mem.
Bibliomania; or Book-Madness|Thomas Frognall Dibdin
Why not wait at least until our return from Camus, or even until the morning?
A Top-Floor Idyl|George van Schaick
Camus, bishop of Bellay, printed in the last century a large book against the monks, which an unfrocked monk abridged.
A Philosophical Dictionary, Volume 1 (of 10)|Franois-Marie Arouet (AKA Voltaire)
On the morrow, about noontide, Camus the Archivist is busy 'verifying their powers;' several hundreds of them already here.
The French Revolution|Thomas Carlyle
Camus, the deity of the river Cam, stands for the University of Cambridge.
Minor Poems by Milton|John Milton
British Dictionary definitions for Camus
Camus
/ (Frenchkamy) /
noun
Albert (albɛr). 1913–60, French novelist, dramatist, and essayist, noted for his pessimistic portrayal of man's condition of isolation in an absurd world: author of the novels L'Étranger (1942) and La Peste (1947), the plays Le Malentendu (1945) and Caligula (1946), and the essays Le Mythe de Sisyphe (1942) and L'Homme révolté (1951): Nobel prize for literature 1957.