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Camus's The Plague Peg Brand Weiser (Laureate Professor and Research Professor of Philosophy, Laureate Professor and Research Professor of Philosophy, University of Arizona)

Camus's The Plague By Peg Brand Weiser (Laureate Professor and Research Professor of Philosophy, Laureate Professor and Research Professor of Philosophy, University of Arizona)

Summary

This collection of original essays on philosophical themes in Albert Camus's The Plague is of special relevance during and in the aftermath of Covid-19 but also provides reflections that will be of lasting value to those interested in this classic work of literature.

Camus's The Plague Summary

Camus's The Plague: Philosophical Perspectives by Peg Brand Weiser (Laureate Professor and Research Professor of Philosophy, Laureate Professor and Research Professor of Philosophy, University of Arizona)

La Peste (in English The Plague), originally published in 1947 by the Nobel Prize-winning writer Albert Camus, chronicles the progression of deadly bubonic plague as it spreads through the quarantined Algerian city of Oran. While most discussions of fictional examples within aesthetics are either historical or hypothetical, Camus offers an example of Camus chose fiction to convey facts--about plagues in the past, his own bout with tuberculosis at age seventeen, living under quarantine away from home for several years, and forced separation from his wife who remained in Algiers while he was abroad in Nazi-occupied France. His own lived experiences undergird an imaginative account of shared human realities with which we can identify: vulnerability to the disease, isolation, fear, and finally humanitarianism. The Plague teaches us to neither covet nor expect what we so casually took for granted. This collection of original essays on philosophical themes in The Plague is of special relevance during and in the aftermath of Covid-19 but also provides reflections that will be of lasting value to those interested in this classic work of literature. The novel explores questions of enduring importance. Do we collectively meet the threshold of ethical behaviour posed by Camus who wrote, ? Or does the absurd undermine the compassionate? Do dutifully fight a plague with or does human nature resign itself to the normalization of uncontrollable suffering and death? There are myriad ways to approach the novel and this volume encourages readers to ponder human dilemmas in fictional Oran informed by our current pandemic.

About Peg Brand Weiser (Laureate Professor and Research Professor of Philosophy, Laureate Professor and Research Professor of Philosophy, University of Arizona)

Peg Brand Weiser is Laureate Professor and Research Professor of Philosophy at the University of Arizona, with affiliated faculty status with Gender & Women's Studies, the W. A. Franke Honors College, and the AIAR (Applied Intercultural Arts Research) Graduate Program.

Table of Contents

Emily Dickinson (1830-1886) poem Series Editor's Foreword Acknowledgements List of Contributors List of Illustrations Introduction, Peg Brand Weiser Chapter 1: The Plague and the Present Moment, Steven G. Kellman Chapter 2: Present in Effacement: The Place of Women in Camus's Plague and Ours, Jane E. Schulz Chapter 3: The Meaning of a Pandemic, Andrew Edgar Chapter 4: Grief and Human Connection in The Plague, Kathleen Higgins Chapter 5: Examining the Narrative Devolution of the Physician in Camus's The Plague, Edward B. Weiser Chapter 6: Horror and Natural Evil in The Plague, Cynthia A. Freeland Chapter 7: 'I Can't Breathe': Covid-19 and The Plague's Tragedy, Margaret E. Gray Chapter 8: Modern Death, Decent Death, and Heroic Solidarity in The Plague, Peg Brand Weiser

Additional information

NGR9780197599334
9780197599334
0197599338
Camus's The Plague: Philosophical Perspectives by Peg Brand Weiser (Laureate Professor and Research Professor of Philosophy, Laureate Professor and Research Professor of Philosophy, University of Arizona)
New
Paperback
Oxford University Press Inc
2023-03-28
216
N/A
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