15%OFF
Stock image for illustration purposes only - book cover, edition or condition may vary.
A Life Worth Living: Albert Camus and the Quest for Meaning
Robert Zaretsky
FREE Delivery in Ireland
Description for A Life Worth Living: Albert Camus and the Quest for Meaning
Paperback. Exploring themes that preoccupied Albert Camus--absurdity, silence, revolt, fidelity, and moderation--Robert Zaretsky portrays a moralist who refused to be fooled by the nobler names we assign to our actions, and who pushed himself, and those about him, to challenge the status quo. For Camus, rebellion against injustice is the human condition. Num Pages: 227 pages. BIC Classification: 2ADF; BGL; DSB; HPCF. Category: (G) General (US: Trade). Dimension: 129 x 191 x 18. Weight in Grams: 238.
In his Nobel Prize acceptance speech, Albert Camus declared that a writer's duty is twofold: the refusal to lie about what one knows and the resistance against oppression. These twin obsessions help explain something of Camus' remarkable character, which is the overarching subject of this sympathetic and lively book. Through an exploration of themes that preoccupied Camus--absurdity, silence, revolt, fidelity, and moderation--Robert Zaretsky portrays a moralist who refused to be fooled by the nobler names we assign to our actions, and who pushed himself, and those about him, to challenge the status quo. Though we ... Read moredo not face the same dangers that threatened Europe when Camus wrote The Myth of Sisyphus and The Stranger, we confront other alarms. Herein lies Camus' abiding significance. Reading his work, we become more thoughtful observers of our own lives. For Camus, rebellion is an eternal human condition, a timeless struggle against injustice that makes life worth living. But rebellion is also bounded by self-imposed constraints--it is a noble if impossible ideal. Such a contradiction suggests that if there is no reason for hope, there is also no occasion for despair--a sentiment perhaps better suited for the ancient tragedians than modern political theorists but one whose wisdom abides. Yet we must not venerate suffering, Camus cautions: the world's beauty demands our attention no less than life's train of injustices. That recognition permits him to declare: It was the middle of winter, I finally realized that, within me, summer was inextinguishable. Show Less
Product Details
Publisher
Harvard University Press
Place of Publication
Cambridge, Mass., United States
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 8 to 11 working days
About Robert Zaretsky
Robert Zaretsky is a literary biographer and historian of France. He is Professor of Humanities at the Honors College, University of Houston, and the author of many books, including A Life Worth Living: Albert Camus and the Quest for Meaning and Boswell's Enlightenment. Zaretsky is the history editor for the Los Angeles Review of Books, a regular columnist for The ... Read moreForward, and a frequent contributor to the New York Times, Los Angeles Times, Foreign Policy, and Chronicle of Higher Education. Show Less
Reviews for A Life Worth Living: Albert Camus and the Quest for Meaning
Enlightening... Zaretsky probes Camus's multifaceted sensibility.
John Taylor Times Literary Supplement (11/08/2013) This is a wonderful introduction to Albert Camus and an overview for those who have already read him. Zaretsky effortlessly explores sometimes difficult concepts in an accessible, even conversational study that blends significant aspects of Camus' life
his Algerian background, life in France, the importance of the war; the ... Read moreResistance and the TB that afflicted him for much of his life
with his works, in such a way that it offers a strong sense of the writings and the writer... The result is a concise portrait of an intellectual deeply concerned with ethics, but with an abiding love of the sensual, and life's beauty.
(12/14/2013) Some writers are lucky enough to be remembered 50 years after they die, and a few are even beloved. What is vanishingly rare, however, is for a long-dead writer to remain controversial. Albert Camus is one of those exceptions, a writer who still has the power to ignite political passions, because he managed to incorporate the history of the 20th century so deeply into his writing... Readers new to Camus will find in Zaretsky a deeply informed and warmly admiring guide.
(10/20/2013) It is extremely limiting to think of Albert Camus as an existentialist philosopher of the absurd. While Camus was never trained as a philosopher, Zaretsky demonstrates that many other themes marked Camus's thought. Camus was a highly principled person, and a strong advocate for justice... Camus's voice still has resonance.
(11/04/2013) More than a half-century after his untimely death in 1960 at age 46, Camus continues to engage us... Zaretsky provides thorough and rigorous examinations into the author's life and work while also helping us understand the disquiet of a man who gave readers seeking sustenance in art some of the most lyrical and encouraging advice in 20th-century literature.
Kevin Rabalais The Australian (11/02/2013) Offer[s] concise, eloquent, and learned treatments of the life and work of the French-Algerian moralist... Camus contained multitudes and...Zaretsky returns to this truth again and again.
Barry Lenser PopMatters (11/21/2013) Zaretsky identifies Camus as a moralist, not a moralizer, one who poses questions rather than imposes answers. Like such courageous moralists as Montaigne, Voltaire, Hugo and Zola, Camus extended his private quest for truth into the public sphere... In pithy prose worthy of his subject, Zaretsky reminds us that, in an age of suicide bombings and state-sanctioned murder, Camus is an author worth reading.
(12/17/2013) Zaretsky offers an invigorating blend of history, criticism, and biography in a stirring reassessment of the Nobel Prize-winning existentialist writer Albert Camus... Zaretsky demonstrates Camus's commitment to justice and the joy of existence, evident in his rejection of Soviet communism, as well as his principled opposition to terrorism and capital punishment. Camus emerges as a compassionate thinker who always ruthlessly interrogated his own beliefs and assumptions. Zaretsky's elegant prose and passion for the subject, meanwhile, will inspire both novices in existentialism as well as experts to revisit the contributions of this great French writer.
(07/08/2013) A marvelously wise, concise, and adventurous exploration of Camus, his intellectual antecedents, the battles that raged around him, and his continuing power to unsettle and inspire us to this day.
Sarah Bakewell, author of How to Live: A Life of Montaigne Zaretsky delivers a lucid perspective on the intellectual provenance of the writer's moral philosophy through an examination of Notebooks, The Myth of Sisyphus, The Rebel, The Plague, and The Stranger. His scrutiny converges on Camus's sense of the fundamental absurdity of life and why suicide is not an option; his sensitivity to the positive and negative aspects of silence; his understanding of the human condition; and his conviction that rebellious response to injustice be measured, not extreme... An admirable, comprehensible introduction to Camus.
(12/13/2013) Zaretsky brings to light in this wonderfully readable intellectual biography of the iconoclastic pied noir the continued relevance of Camus in contemporary life... This volume offers a portrait of Camus not simply as an existentialist (as is typical) but rather as a 'Mediterranean humanist' disillusioned by the world's failure to live up to its purest ideals.
L. A. Wilkinson Choice (05/01/2014) What emerges is the paradoxical portrait of an exceptional everyman: imperfect, plagued by doubt, melancholic, flawed, but also sensitive, hopeful, passionate and heroic... A Life Worth Living reveals much about Camus, the times he lived in and wrote against... Those looking for a better understanding of the context in which Camus penned his books and essays on murder, torture, suicide, silence and rebellion will find much to ruminate on... Zaretsky is especially adept at seamlessly weaving Camus' own words into the text, and the result is that the reader feels almost as though she is reading Camus as opposed to a biographer... Zaretsky's book is good reading for dark times, a wonderfully written monograph about an absurd hero whose life serves as a reminder that, 'while we have no reason to hope, we must also never despair.'
Jon Morris PopMatters (12/10/2013) The centenary [of Camus's birth] has spurred books, papers and reconsideration of his contributions to literature and his times. Robert Zaretsky's is one of the best. The Algerian-French Nobel Prize winner, known for novels such as The Stranger and The Plague and essays including 'The Myth of Sisyphus' and 'Reflections on the Guillotine, ' wrote piercingly and urgently about facing injustice, the need for revolt, confronting absurdity and the search for meaning. Zaretsky underscores why the ideas of Camus, who died in a car accident in 1960, remain important today.
(12/27/2013) For a good short study of [Camus's] life, work and philosophy, try Robert Zaretsky's A Life Worth Living: Albert Camus and the Quest for Meaning.
Stephen Romei The Australian (12/14/2013) In the beautifully titled and beautifully written A Life Worth Living: Albert Camus and the Quest for Meaning, historian Robert Zaretsky considers Camus's lifelong quest to shed light on the absurd condition, his 'yearning for a meaning or a unity to our lives, ' and its timeless yet increasingly timely legacy... A remarkable read in its entirety.
Maria Popova Brain Pickings (10/01/2014) A Life Worth Living departs from the chronological approach... Instead, Zaretsky tells [Camus's] story according to the five themes that preoccupied his life and work: absurdity, silence, measure, fidelity, and revolt. The result is a much more human portrait of a man whose life is often reduced to a meditation on the bleakness of absurdism. By chronicling the ideas rather than the events of Camus's life, Zaretsky shows that 'Camus was all too human: an obvious point that our desperate need for heroes, especially now, often obscures.'
(11/08/2013) Show Less