Albert Camus’ writing often comforts the restless mind by reminding us of inner strength, clarity, and quiet acceptance. His ...
Her frenetic new dance-theater work, which opens a new festival at the new park on the Hudson, includes references to Camus and music by T Bone Burnett. By Naveen Kumar Andy Cohen, Fran Lebowitz and ...
Albert Camus never wrote for comfort. His books question morality, freedom, absurdity, and the quiet loneliness inside modern ...
On Jan. 4, 1960, the world lost one of the most profound voices of the 20th century. Albert Camus, the 46-year-old author of “The Stranger” and “The Plague” and a recent winner of the Nobel Prize in ...
Algerian Chronicles shows that Camus still has something to say to us—not about terrorism but economic justice. Toward the end of his recent memoir, Jean Daniel, the last surviving friend of Albert ...
The intellectual had little faith in rationalism and existentialism but devoted his life to opposing nihilism “Nothing is more despicable than respect based on fear,” wrote Albert Camus, who died 54 ...
Ebola’s exponential growth and extraterritorial reach has caused commentators across the ideological spectrum — from former U.S. Central Command chief Gen. Anthony Zinni to the Daily Kos — to describe ...
Patrick Condon is the James Taylor chair in Landscape and Livable Environments at the University of British Columbia’s School of Architecture and Landscape Architecture and the founding chair of the ...