Takayoshi kano biography of albert camus
Albert Camus was a French intellectual and influential philosopher who was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in The novels he left behind after a tragic death at the age of 46 are considered among some of the most important literary works of the 20th century. In addition to writing and developing cutting-edge ideas of post-modern thought, Camus was a man of intense political involvement and action.
He was a prolific social critic. It is perhaps more accurate to think of Camus as an anarchist who hated totalitarian regimes. He believed people deserved to live in freedom and equality. Albert Camus was born in in French Algeria. He is identified as a Pied-Noir which is a term used to describe people of French nationality who lived in the former French protectorates of northern Africa.
His father, Lucien, was a lower-class agricultural worker. His mother, Catherine Helene Sintes, was of Spanish descent. The family lived in a two-room home with a dirt floor. Lucian was killed fighting in World War I, which meant that Albert would grow up in even poorer conditions.
Using the time regained in Part 1 (up to 34 days per year), the symptoms of low level disruption can be studied throughout human life and human history.
He barely knew his father. Camus was often sick and nearly deaf. She struggled to raise her two children. Albert had an older brother, Lucien. School and education were the salvation of young Albert as he grew up in dreary poverty.