Albert Camus died Jan 4 1940. In his novel The Plague he describes the experience of a modern port city in Algeria as it is besieged by bubonic plague. The disease— a counterpart to the German occupation of France—is also a symbol for the human condition.
2
8
22
For Camus, such a world imposes a solemn duty of revolt, the refusal to consent to a condition which tortures innocents and reduces the life of each person to absurdity. The heroes of the novel are those who resist the plague.
1
6
“That they should get away from abstractions and confront the blood-stained face history has taken on today.” He described the moral challenge of his generation: “If not to reduce evil at least not to add to it.” He won the Nobel Prize in 1957. He died in a car accident at 46.
Jan 4, 2019 · 12:39 AM UTC
10






