Albert Camus and the Human Crisis
A Discovery and Exploration
-
- $27.99
-
- $27.99
Publisher Description
A renowned scholar investigates the "human crisis” that Albert Camus confronted in his world and in ours, producing a brilliant study of Camus’s life and influence for those readers who, in Camus's words, “cannot live without dialogue and friendship.”
As France—and all of the world—was emerging from the depths of World War II, Camus summed up what he saw as "the human crisis”:
We gasp for air among people who believe they are absolutely right, whether it be in their machines or their ideas. And for all who cannot live without dialogue and the friendship of other human beings, this silence is the end of the world.
In the years after he wrote these words, until his death fourteen years later, Camus labored to address this crisis, arguing for dialogue, understanding, clarity, and truth. When he sailed to New York, in March 1946—for his first and only visit to the United States—he found an ebullient nation celebrating victory. Camus warned against the common postwar complacency that took false comfort in the fact that Hitler was dead and the Third Reich had fallen. Yes, the serpentine beast was dead, but “we know perfectly well,” he argued, “that the venom is not gone, that each of us carries it in our own hearts.” All around him in the postwar world, Camus saw disheartening evidence of a global community revealing a heightened indifference to a number of societal ills. It is the same indifference to human suffering that we see all around, and within ourselves, today.
Camus’s voice speaks like few others to the heart of an affliction that infects our country and our world, a world divided against itself. His generation called him “the conscience of Europe.” That same voice speaks to us and our world today with a moral integrity and eloquence so sorely lacking in the public arena.
Few authors, sixty years after their deaths, have more avid readers, across more continents, than Albert Camus. Camus has never been a trend, a fad, or just a good read. He was always and still is a companion, a guide, a challenge, and a light in darkened times. This keenly insightful story of an intellectual is an ideal volume for those readers who are first discovering Camus, as well as a penetrating exploration of the author for all those who imagine they have already plumbed Camus’ depths—a supremely timely book on an author whose time has come once again.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Meagher (Killing From the Inside Out), a humanities professor at Hampshire College, sheds light on Albert Camus's "enduring contribution to today's challenges" in this brilliant study. The author begins with what he considers a definitive moment in Camus's career: his lecture at Columbia University in 1946 entitled "The Human Crisis." In his remarks, Camus identified that "the years we have lived through have killed something in us. And that something is the old confidence man had in himself, which led him to believe that he could always elicit human reactions from another man if he spoke to him in the language of a common humanity." Using this as a framing device, Meagher puts Camus's thought in dialog with the myths of Sisyphus (with whom Camus shared a deep love of life) and Prometheus, whom he oft cited and who represents the crisis, and explains the intellectual importance of Camus's activity in the French Resistance. Meagher argues strongly against the notion that Camus was an existentialist and an atheist, and makes a convincing case that a modern world in peril ought turn to "the moral clarity and prophetic wisdom" of Camus. Fans of the philosopher and those new to his work will find this full of insight.