Template:For Template:Short description Template:Infobox book Exile and the Kingdom (Template:Langx) is a 1957 collection of six short stories by French writer Albert Camus. First published in French, in translation, it was not well received by contemporary English critics.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> The underlying theme of these stories is human loneliness and feeling foreign and isolated in one's own society.<ref>Albert Camus's Exile and the Kingdom</ref> Camus writes about outsiders living in Algeria who straddle the divide between the Muslim world and France.<ref name="fadedpage">Exile and the Kingdom at fadedpage.com</ref>

StoriesEdit

These works of fiction cover the whole variety of existentialism, or absurdism, as Camus himself insisted his philosophical ideas be called. The clearest manifestation of the ideals of Camus can be found in the story "La Pierre qui pousse." This story features D'Arrast, who can be seen as a positive hero as opposed to Meursault in The Stranger.<ref>The Fiction of Albert Camus: A Complex Simplicity, Moya Longstaffe</ref> He actively shapes his life and sacrifices himself in order to help a friend, instead of remaining passive. The moral quality of his actions is intensified by the fact that D'Arrast has deep insight into the absurdity of the world but acts morally nevertheless (not unlike the main character in The Plague). In the Silent Men, Camus reveals his understanding of the life of lower class laborers. The main character, Yvars, is a barrel maker, like Camus's uncle, for whom he worked as a teenager.<ref name="fadedpage"/>

The six works collected in this volume are:

ReferencesEdit

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