S'abonner

Connection

Reading a Lost Wartime Letter from Albert Camus in 2020

Reading a Lost Wartime Letter from Albert Camus in 2020

In Camus’s vision—as expressed in a letter on the philosophical crisis of the French Resistance—justice, including economic justice, is meaningless without an equally passionate commitment to liberty.
Adam Gopnik writes about the discovery of a letter written by Albert Camus, in 1943, on the philosophical crisis of the French Resistance, and how the letter’s message resonates today.

Lessons on hope from a Hungarian forced labourer in World War II

A Letter to a Friend. Should I Give Up My Seat? - Accidental European

Reading Camus' The Plague in the Midst of a Pandemic ‹ CrimeReads

In a Plague-Time, Rereading Albert Camus' “The Plague”, by Carla Seaquist

Albert Camus, Literature, and The Plague – Thinking Through The Bible

A Typewritten Draft Page With Autograph Corrections From Albert Camus's Famous The Crisis Of Man Speech Given At Columbia University In 1946 by ALBERT CAMUS, Search for rare books

A Letter From Paris Under Lockdown

Coronavirus Notebook: Finding Solace, and Connection, in Classic Books - The New York Times

Reading a Lost Wartime Letter from Albert Camus in 2020

The Stranger, Summary, Context, & Analysis

The Center for the Humanities