Albert Camus

1957


"for his important literary production, which, with clear-sighted earnestness, illuminates the problems of the human conscience in our times"

--The Nobel Foundation


Statistics:

France

1913-1960

prize presentation

Biography:

 

 

 

 

 

Less than a year after Camus was born, his father, an impoverished worker of Alsatian origin, was killed in World War I during the First Battle of the Marne. His mother, of Spanish descent, worked as a charwoman to support her family. Camus and his elder brother Lucien moved with their mother to a working-class district of Algiers, where all three lived, together with the maternal grandmother and a paralyzed uncle, in a two-room apartment. Camus's first published collection of essays, L'Envers et l'endroit (1937; "The Wrong Side and the Right Side"), describes the physical setting of these early years and includes portraits of his mother, grandmother, and uncle. A second collection of essays, Noces (1938; "Nuptials"), contains intensely lyrical meditations on the Algerian countryside and presents natural beauty as a form of wealth that even the very poor can enjoy. Both collections contrast the fragile mortality of human beings with the enduring nature of the physical world.

In 1918 Camus entered primary school and was fortunate enough to be taught by an outstanding teacher, Louis Germain, who helped him to win a scholarship to the Algiers lycée (high school) in 1923. (It was typical of Camus's sense of loyalty that 34 years later his speech accepting the Nobel Prize for Literature was dedicated to Germain.) At the University of Algiers, Camus was particularly influenced by one of his teachers, Jean Grenier, who helped him to develop his literary and philosophical ideas and shared his enthusiasm for football.

L'Étranger (U.S. title, The Stranger; British title, The Outsider), a brilliant first novel begun before the war and published in 1942, is a study of 20th-century alienation with a portrait of an "outsider" condemned to death less for shooting an Arab than for the fact that he never says more than he genuinely feels and refuses to conform to society's demands. The same year saw the publication of an influential philosophical essay, Le Mythe de Sisyphe (The Myth of Sisyphus), in which Camus, with considerable sympathy, analyzed contemporary nihilism and a sense of the "absurd." He was already seeking a way of overcoming nihilism, and his second novel, La Peste (1947; The Plague), is a symbolical account of the fight against an epidemic in Oran by characters whose importance lies less in the (doubtful) success with which they oppose the epidemic than in their determined assertion of human dignity and fraternity. Camus had now moved from his first main concept of the absurd to his other major idea of moral and metaphysical "rebellion." He contrasted this latter ideal with politico-historical revolution in a second long essay, L'Homme révolté (1951; The Rebel), which provoked bitter antagonism among Marxist critics and such near-Marxist theoreticians as Jean-Paul Sartre. His other major literary works are the technically brilliant novel La Chute (1956) and a collection of short stories, L'Exil et le royaume (1957; Exile and the Kingdom). La Chute reveals a preoccupation with Christian symbolism and contains an ironical and witty exposure of the more complacent forms of secular humanist morality.

In 1957, at the early age of 44, Camus received the Nobel Prize for Literature. With characteristic modesty he declared that had he been a member of the awarding committee his vote would certainly have gone to André Malraux. Less than three years later he was killed in an automobile accident.

Encyclopedia Britannica

See also:
The Existence of Albert Camus
Existentialism and Albert Camus
Interview with Catherine Camus about 'The First Man'
From the Archives of the New York Times


Bibliography:

 

 

*The Wrong Side and the Right Side (1937)
*Nuptials (1938)
The Stranger; The Outsider (1942)
The Myth of Sisyphus and Other Essay (1942)
The Plague (1947)
The Rebel: An Essay on Man in Revolt (1951)
*Summer (1954)
The Fall (1956)
Exile and the Kingdom (1957)
*Réflexions Sur la Guillotine (1957)
Caligula and Three Other Plays (1958)
Caligula
The Misunderstanding
State of Siege
The Just Assassins
*Demons (1958)
*Actuelles Tome I (1944-1948)
*Actuelles Tome II (1948-1953)
*Actuelles Tome III (1954-1958)
Resistance, Rebellion, and Death (1960)
*Carnets (1960)
Notebooks 1935-1942 (1962)
Notebooks 1942-1951 (1964)
Notebooks 1951-1959 (1966)
*Budapest (23 octobre 1956) (1966)
A Happy Death (1970)
The First Man (1995)
*American Journals
*Actualles Ecrits Politiques
Between Hell and Reason : Essays from the Resistance Newspaper 'Combat'
Lyrical and Critical Essays
*Neither Victims nor Executioners
Youthful Writings


Books about Albert Camus:

Albert Camus: A Life (Olivier Todd)
Camus: A Critical Examination (David Sprintzen)
Albert Camus: A Biography (Herbert R. Lottman)
*Portrait of Camus: An Illustrated Biography (Morvan Lebesque)
*Camus (Patrick McCarthy)

*out of print


Last updated: December 2003

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