First published in French in 1942,
Le Mythe de Sisypheis a philosophical essay at the heart of which is the theme of the absurd. Alongside the novel
L’Etranger[
The Stranger] (1942), and the plays
Caligula[
Caligula] (1939) and
Le Malentendu[The Misunderstanding] (1944),
Le Mythe de Sisypheforms part of Camus’s “cycle of the absurd”, a series of works which all examine the consequences of absurdity in the lives of individuals.
Le Mythe de Sisyphealso prefigures Camus’s second major philosophical essay,
L’Homme Révolté[
The Rebel] (1951), which, like the novel
La Peste[
The Plague] (1947), and the plays
L’État de Siège[
The State of Siege] (1948) and
Les Justes[
The Just Assassins] (1949), examines the metaphysical and social aspects of revolt and rebellion at the…
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Citation: Dicks, Henry. "Le Mythe de Sisyphe". The Literary Encyclopedia. First published 17 August 2012 [https://www.litencyc.com/php/sworks.php?rec=true&UID=11620, accessed 24 November 2024.]