Albert Camus

Novelist

Albert Camus was born in Dréan, El Tarf Province, Algeria on November 7th, 1913 and is the Novelist. At the age of 46, Albert Camus biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.

  Report
Date of Birth
November 7, 1913
Nationality
France
Place of Birth
Dréan, El Tarf Province, Algeria
Death Date
Jan 4, 1960 (age 46)
Zodiac Sign
Scorpio
Profession
Essayist, French Resistance Fighter, Journalist, Novelist, Philosopher, Playwright, Poet, Screenwriter, Writer
Social Media
Albert Camus Height, Weight, Eye Color and Hair Color

At 46 years old, Albert Camus has this physical status:

Height
176cm
Weight
Not Available
Hair Color
Not Available
Eye Color
Not Available
Build
Not Available
Measurements
Not Available
Albert Camus Religion, Education, and Hobbies
Religion
Not Available
Hobbies
Not Available
Education
University of Algiers
Albert Camus Spouse(s), Children, Affair, Parents, and Family
Spouse(s)
Simone Hié ​ ​(m. 1934; div. 1936)​, Francine Faure ​(m. 1940)​
Children
Not Available
Dating / Affair
Not Available
Parents
Catherine Helene Sintes, Lucien Auguste Camus
Albert Camus Career

Camus's first publication was a play called Révolte dans les Asturies (Revolt in the Asturias) written with three friends in May 1936. The subject was the 1934 revolt by Spanish miners that was brutally suppressed by the Spanish government resulting in 1,500 to 2,000 deaths. In May 1937 he wrote his first book, L'Envers et l'Endroit (Betwixt and Between, also translated as The Wrong Side and the Right Side). Both were published by Edmond Charlot's small publishing house.

Camus separated his work into three cycles. Each cycle consisted of a novel, an essay, and a play. The first was the cycle of the absurd consisting of L'Étranger, Le Mythe de Sysiphe, and Caligula. The second was the cycle of the revolt which included La Peste (The Plague), L'Homme révolté (The Rebel), and Les Justes (The Just Assassins). The third, the cycle of the love, consisted of Nemesis. Each cycle was an examination of a theme with the use of a pagan myth and including biblical motifs.

The books in the first cycle were published between 1942 and 1944, but the theme was conceived earlier, at least as far back as 1936. With this cycle, Camus aims to pose a question on the human condition, discuss the world as an absurd place, and warn humanity of the consequences of totalitarianism.

Camus began his work on the second cycle while he was in Algeria, in the last months of 1942, just as the Germans were reaching North Africa. In the second cycle, Camus used Prometheus, who is depicted as a revolutionary humanist, to highlight the nuances between revolution and rebellion. He analyses various aspects of rebellion, its metaphysics, its connection to politics, and examines it under the lens of modernity, of historicity and the absence of a God.

After receiving the Nobel Prize, Camus gathered, clarified, and published his pacifist leaning views at Actuelles III: Chronique algérienne 1939–1958 (Algerian Chronicles). He then decided to distance himself from the Algerian War as he found the mental burden too heavy. He turned to theatre and the third cycle which was about love and the goddess Nemesis.

Two of Camus's works were published posthumously. The first entitled La mort heureuse (A Happy Death) (1970), features a character named Patrice Mersault, comparable to The Stranger's Meursault. There is scholarly debate about the relationship between the two books. The second was an unfinished novel, Le Premier homme (The First Man) (1995), which Camus was writing before he died. It was an autobiographical work about his childhood in Algeria and its publication in 1994 sparked a widespread reconsideration of Camus's allegedly unrepentant colonialism.

Source

Lethal injection, electric chair, firing squad or even nitrogen gas: The execution methods still used in the world today as one death row inmate in the US faces an impossible choice

www.dailymail.co.uk, October 11, 2024
After languishing on Death Row for almost 25 years, convicted murderer Richard Moore (inset) now faces an agonising decision - choosing how he will be executed. The 59-year-old American has less than a week to pick his fate for fatally shooting a shop assistant in Spartanburg County, South Carolina, during a botched robbery in September 1999. Jail officials have told him he has three options : death by firing squad, electric chair, or lethal injection. If he can't make up his mind come Friday, he will be electrocuted by default on November 1. And as Moore mulls over how he will ultimately end his life, his Death Row dilemma has once again thrust the debate over state-sanctioned executions back into the spotlight. Although deemed 'humane' methods of death, each of his options come with their own nightmarish risks, which could see Moore facing a tortuous and excruciatingly painful end.

How I built my own girlfriend: COSMO LANDESMAN was a lonely singleton pushing 70, so decided try robot romance

www.dailymail.co.uk, August 17, 2024
He was a lonely singleton pushing 70. She was a smart, sexy, sweet-tempered… chatbot. Cosmo Landesman reveals what happened on his first foray into the weird world of AI romance

Forget France's 'heroic' World War Two myth, remember the shameful reality: Paris surrendered without a shot, Jews sent to death camps and the most brutal savagery between countrymen

www.dailymail.co.uk, August 16, 2024
Until this moment, the lanky man in khaki had been just a voice on the radio, beamed in from London . Now the 6ft 5in figure was the embodiment of victorious France as he towered over his compatriots in the sweaty, ecstatic throng packed into the Hôtel de Ville on the banks of the Seine. General Charles de Gaulle rarely showed emotion, but he swallowed hard on that day of wild celebrations, Friday, August 25, 1944, before he described the ordeal from which the City of Light had just emerged. Paris had been 'outraged... broken... martyred'. But now, he continued triumphantly, it was 'liberated. Liberated by itself! Liberated by its people with the help of the armies of France, with the help and assistance of the whole of France, of that France which fights, of the only France, the true France, the eternal France!'.