Source: Wikipedia Albert Camus, the renowned Algerian-French philosopher, novelist, and Nobel Prize winner, died at the young age of 46. His death cut short a career that had profoundly influenced ...
It is often said of La Peste - written in 1947 by the Nobel Prize winner for literature, Albert Camus - that the plague and the rats in his novel are an allegory for the rise of fascism across Europe.
In 1957, ALBERT CAMUS became the second youngest author to have been awarded the Nobel Prize. His tragic death in an automobile accident early in 1960 deprived the world of a philosopher ...
In the 20th century, more precisely in 1942, in The Myth of Sisyphus, Albert Camus presented the constant struggle of man ...
Nobel prize winner Albert Camus rose to fame in France on the publication of his novel L'Etranger (The Outsider) in 1942. The philosopher and author died in a car crash in Paris at the age of 46.