Imago poetis
Albert Camus în căutarea noului umanism
Abstract
In the transparent allegory from Camus’s novel The Plague,
a symbolic epidemic has taken the place of evil, which has multiple faces
(war, occupation, the concentration camp universe, tyranny, and the terror
of authoritarian systems). However, the plague also personifies the absurd,
which is, in Camus’s vision, the essence of existence. Beyond the everyday
premises of the epidemic, those of a metaphysical nature (trivial existence,
moral decline, nonsense and absurdity of urban life) one can also be decoded,
to which the Camus’s characters respond through action and solidarity.
The city of Oran, engulfed by the plague and isolated from the world, is an
image of occupied France, but wider – the symbol of Earth, of the wandering
and tiny planet, where the consciousness of man faced with the evidence of
the absurd appeared. The end of the novel calls for vigilance, imperatively
necessary in the face of the inability to overcome evil once and for all. The
Nobel Prize awarded to Camus in 1957 crowned a work that brings to light
problems that are still posed to human consciousness today.
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