Caligula

Caligula

by (france) Albert Camus

Length:
46Kwords60chapters
Latest:
Ch. 60Postscript: Absurdity, Happiness, and Logical Reason as Device
Activity:
Updated 7mo agoScraped 11h ago
0QD Score

About This Novel

This book is a four-act tragedy created by Albert Camus. It is based on the life of the ancient Roman tyrant Caligula and profoundly reflects Camus' existentialism and absurd philosophy. In the play, Caligula begins to question the meaning and value of life after experiencing the shock of the death of his beloved lover. He found that personality, dignity, and even pain were meaningless in the face of death, which triggered his extreme use of power and destruction of the existing order. He became a tyrant who wantonly trampled on the original human system, good and evil, and emotions, trying to find truth and eternity through power and expose the hypocrisy of the world. Through the image of Caligula, Camus explores the way humans deal with themselves in the face of an absurd world, showing the destructive consequences of abuse of power and personal madness. At the same time, he also put forward profound thoughts about human existence and freedom, and explored how to find personal meaning and value in an absurd world.

What Readers Think

Rating

Good0%Neutral0%Bad0%

Community(0)

You Might Also Like