Absurd Heroism in Albert Camus's The Plague

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Albert Camus’s novel, “The Plague,” gives a fairly different view on philosophy, using heroism and absurdity to further his ideas. According to Merriam-Webster, absurdity is the quality or state of being absurd [or unreasonable].” One being enveloped in the philosophies of an absurd hero is someone who grasps that the world absences order and direction, however; that great disclosure does not faze him, continuing their own existential embodiment. Camus develops the characters in “The Plague,” to represent the characteristics of an absurd hero. Dr. Rieux displays this starts off as a basis of an absurd hero. Thus, he recognizes that the world around him is absurd and illogical, but continues his efforts throughout the novel. In “The Myth of …show more content…

Our citizens work hard, but solely with the object of getting rich. In other words, he portrays them habituated to a recurring lifestyle, mocking, and disdaining them for their triviality. They were simply lifeless before the plague struck; death was never problematic for them as they would not ever confront and antagonize this absurdity within their daily lives. The plague’s arrival denotes a physical manifestation of the absurd. Nevertheless, everyone in town is forced to respond and unable to continue their daily mundane lives when faced with death. Rieux is an exemplifying notion of Camus’s novel when confronting the absurd conditions of Oran. His journey to overcome this absurdity leads him to keep going and strives …show more content…

Rieux throughout the novel is compassion and sympathy towards humanity. Grand is another character in “The Plague” and he challenged by the sense of loneliness and expulsion from what is important to him, yet he remains an affectionate and tender man. He even strongly encourages the necessity of fighting against the plague as an obligation of human civility as he says "Why that’s not difficult! Plague is here and we’ve got to make a stand, that’s obvious.” His writing and his struggle for opposition are both stirred by love (for his late wife) and yearn for what he feels in his heart. Rieux comes to appreciate Grand’s lonesomeness and love for his departed wife. In the end, Grand falls sick with the plague. This is clearly shown in this quote; “Rieux, too, couldn't speak...At this moment he suffered from Grand's sorrow, and what filled his breast was the passionate indignation we feel when confronted by the anguish all men share." In other words, Rieux sympathized with his fading friend, as he acknowledges the pain he and Grand both have in common. This lets Grant know the importance of love and his memories of his past wife, curing him of his meaningless in

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