Albert Camus and Jean-Paul Sartre/ Camus and The Death Penalty
Albert Camus and Jean-Paul Sartre/ Camus and The Death Penalty
Albert Camus and Jean-Paul Sartre/ Camus and The Death Penalty
● Background
● Jean- Paul Sartre
● Camus and Sartre’s Relationship
● Camus’ Thoughts on Death Penalty
● Reflections of the Guillotine
● Video
● Discussion Questions
Background (leading up to Camus meeting
Sartre)
● 1940- Left algeria because he was a national security threat due to his
writings being published (went against the war)
● Camus went into exile with his return to Paris, where he was editor of
newspaper calling for strong moral actions
● During this time, Camus met Sartre at a dress rehearsal of Sartre’s play
● Camus went into politics after seeing the Algerian poor; Sartre got
involved in politics after seeing WW2 prison camps
● Liberation of France made the 2 men the country’s new intellectual heralds
that led the belief existentialist
Jean- Paul Sartre(biography/known for)
● Both lost their fathers as children and were raised by struggling mothers
● Both went to university to study philosophy
● Both believed in existentialism and portrayed the idea through their novels
● Both were activists through journalism
Camus and Sartre’s Portrayal of Existentialism
● Camus praised Sartre for his novel, Nausea, because of the way he
portrayed the absurdity of life.
● “I am alone in the midst of these happy, reasonable voices. All these creatures spend their time
explaining, realizing happily that they agree with each other. In Heaven's name, why is it so important to
think the same things all together ” (Nausea).
● “I want to leave, to go somewhere where I should be really in my place, where I would fit in . . . but my
place is nowhere; I am unwanted” (Nausea).
● He admired Sartre’s honesty about the existence of man.
● He hailed Sartre’s lucidity and his depiction of characters whose freedom
was useless to them
● Camus started to pick up his style of writing.
Tensions Between Camus and Sartre
● At first, Camus and Sartre were united by common experience in the Resistance,
to promote social change- Wanted Algerians to have rights as French citizens
○ Shared belief that universe is apart from reason; unlike Sartre Camus did see life as valuable, worth
defending
● Tension came from different beliefs towards Communism
○ Sartre supported Stalin and Marxism (along with the terror that came with it)
○ Camus did not like the violence of the Soviet Regime, didn’t like the “ends justify the means”
mentality of the communist revolutionaries
● The company of women also split the men
○ Sartre was jealous of Camus’s good looks.
○ Camus was a loner, while Sartre was in the company Parisian intellectuals
How the Relationship Ended
● While at first it was easy to observe the two being friends, it becomes
obvious that Camus and Sartre were almost destined to be rivals.
● They had both been awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature, and both
philosophers.
● Both Camus and Sartre preferred the company of women over men, and
Sartre’s lifelong friend and companion had once shown interest in Camus
● Camus had seemingly triumphed over Sartre with his extremely popular
work, The Plague, which sold thousands of copies followed by The Rebel.
● After his rejection of Camus’s essay, Sartre wrote a letter to Camus that
ultimately dismissed their friendship.
Relationship End (Continued)
● When Camus won his Nobel Prize for literature, he was questioned about his
relationship with Sartre
● Previously, Camus had felt ripped apart by his friend’s critique of his book, however
he responded differently.
● “The relationship is outstanding, monsieur, because the best relationships are those
in which we do not see one another.”
● Showing his resentment of Sartre once again, Camus said, “A writer could not evade
the tragedies of his time.”
● Ultimately when Camus had died, Sartre felt remorse, which he showed through his
tribute for Camus. “For all those who loved him, there is an unbearable absurdity in
that death.”
Philosophical Differences
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sQN76Vv-nVw
Start at 1:38:00
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_iW74PnBIGo
End at 1:57
Discussion Questions
2. How would Camus’s style of writing be different if he had never met Sartre?