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Albert Camus Biography
Writer
Albert Camus was one of the most highly-regarded French writers while he was alive, and today his books continue to be bestsellers in France and staples of university courses in Western literature and philosophy. Camus grew up poor in Algeria, where he studied philosophy and got involved in the theater and in journalism. In 1938 he moved to France (his father was French, his mother was Spanish) and kept writing essays and plays, earning a reputation among literary and philosophical circles. He was a member of the French Resistance during World War II and co-edited the left-wing journal Combat until 1948. In 1957 he became the youngest-ever recipient of the Nobel Prize for Literature, based on essays such as "Le Mythe de Sisyphe" ("The Myth of Sisyphus," 1942) and novels including L'etranger (The Stranger or The Outsider, 1941), La Peste (The Plague, 1946) and L'Homme Revolte (The Rebel, 1951). Camus wrote about alienation and moral responsibility and is often compared to his one-time colleague, Jean-Paul Sartre (in the late 1940s their relationship ended over Sartre's defense of communism under Stalin). Camus described himself as pessimistic about the human condition, yet he ardently sought a positive solution to the "absurdist" position that life is meaningless. While en route to Paris on January 4, 1960, he and his publisher, Michel Gallimard, were killed in an automobile accident.
Extra credit: In 1995 his daughter, Catherine Camus, published his final (and unfinished) manuscript, The First Man.
Camus joins racer Dale Earnhardt and rocker D. Boon in our loop Death By Car.
Four Good Links
Existentialism and Albert Camus
A fan offers links and commentary
Albert Camus
A handful of photos, plus links to other writers
Albert Camus
Profile of his life and some analysis of his work
Albert Camus
More descriptions of his work in the theater here
Vital Stats
Birth
Birthplace
Death
4 January 1960
(automobile crash, age 46)
Best Known As
Nobel-winning author of The Stranger
