Camus complements his novels with long peritexts, thus using his ecclesiastic authority to legitimise their moral and didactic value. In these peritexts he juxtapposes the licentious novels with his own devout works of fiction, which are, in his own words, not only valuable and worth recommending, but also capable of saving the readers’ souls, put in danger by other texts. In any case, a close reading of these peritexts reveals a view which challenges the idea of the novel’s insidiousness and which bears witness to Camus’s great fascination with this officially condemned literary genre
The aim of this thesis is to determine that which constitutes cynical consciousness within the works...
Both literature and philosophy, as genres of writing, can enable us to address important ontological...
This essay examines The Myth of Sisyphus (1942), The Plague (1947), and The Rebel (1951). I have cho...
Histoire, fable, fiction: Description of the novel in a 17th century work by Jean-Pierre CamusIn the...
Literary criticism has traditionally associated the work of Albert Camus with a very specific concep...
The following thesis aims to demonstrate the relevance of the work of Albert Camus to contemporary e...
The challenge nowadays is how to approach the early life and work of Albert Camus without slipping i...
Albert Camus the novelist is better remembered than Albert Camus the political philosopher. Still, C...
This essay explores the place of decency (l’honnêteté) and the decent man (l’honnête homme) in the m...
ii The aim of my study of Camus is twofold. The first aspect concerns the content of his books, the ...
This study addresses a gap in scholarly research on Albert Camus, first by exploring the place of hi...
Lire Camus au-delà de la « philosophie de l’absurde » et de l’image sartrienne d’un « moraliste » to...
The chapter has two main parts. Part One looks at Camus’s argumentthat totalitarian regimes un...
This article considers the relation between L\u27Etranger and Caligula, with Camus\u27 philosophical...
The Fall by Albert Camus, published in 1956, is cryptic and easily misunderstood. On first reading, ...
The aim of this thesis is to determine that which constitutes cynical consciousness within the works...
Both literature and philosophy, as genres of writing, can enable us to address important ontological...
This essay examines The Myth of Sisyphus (1942), The Plague (1947), and The Rebel (1951). I have cho...
Histoire, fable, fiction: Description of the novel in a 17th century work by Jean-Pierre CamusIn the...
Literary criticism has traditionally associated the work of Albert Camus with a very specific concep...
The following thesis aims to demonstrate the relevance of the work of Albert Camus to contemporary e...
The challenge nowadays is how to approach the early life and work of Albert Camus without slipping i...
Albert Camus the novelist is better remembered than Albert Camus the political philosopher. Still, C...
This essay explores the place of decency (l’honnêteté) and the decent man (l’honnête homme) in the m...
ii The aim of my study of Camus is twofold. The first aspect concerns the content of his books, the ...
This study addresses a gap in scholarly research on Albert Camus, first by exploring the place of hi...
Lire Camus au-delà de la « philosophie de l’absurde » et de l’image sartrienne d’un « moraliste » to...
The chapter has two main parts. Part One looks at Camus’s argumentthat totalitarian regimes un...
This article considers the relation between L\u27Etranger and Caligula, with Camus\u27 philosophical...
The Fall by Albert Camus, published in 1956, is cryptic and easily misunderstood. On first reading, ...
The aim of this thesis is to determine that which constitutes cynical consciousness within the works...
Both literature and philosophy, as genres of writing, can enable us to address important ontological...
This essay examines The Myth of Sisyphus (1942), The Plague (1947), and The Rebel (1951). I have cho...