Fall of Autumn in Albert Camus The novel "Fall" written by Albert Camus of Nobel Laureate in 1957 is a story based on repentance. The main character Jean-Baptiste Clamence depicts himself as a good citizenship and an acceptable microcosm of an acceptable behavior, and now he is facing the reality that his existence is deeply depressed on hypocrisy. It is inside. Clamence is also enjoying the cheap dreams offered by Amsterdam prostitutes and bars publicly. In a bar called Mexico City, Clamence began to recall his life as a respected lawyer who was said to be unaffected by judgment.
In Albert Camus' short and painful monologue "Autumn" (1956), a foolish and drunk lawyer, Jean-Baptiste Clamence in Amsterdam, was a deterrent to the bar. At the time of reading the book, this book perfectly expresses that the worst and most troublesome French intellectuals, vanity to humanitarian rackets, and disbelievers become synonyms of integrity It seems. "It's too late," Camu's sarcastic shop told his interlocutors not to drop into the canal. "It's always too late." However, in the end I began to appreciate texts in a variety of ways. When he was falling when he was depressed, Camu began to ask simple questions to himself. If we pretend that the lives of others are important, will we act like them? The answer is that we will no longer think of ourselves as human like former judge of Camus.
In honor of Albert, Jean-Paul Sauter stated that corruption might be a "cornerstone" coronation book, which is not "best understood". Considering Sartre's most famous work, Huis Clos (or No Exit), that "hell is someone else" and that hero of The Jean-Baptiste Clemens by Michael Brett's "Slit My Throat" I passed through his life. "As a criminal novel masterpiece never remembered, it may not even be published again, but when Brett tries to make the best detective novelist, an interesting story It is often still fun to clarify by creating. one
This moral complexity is the most eloquent in his short story "The Fall" and its only role, Clemens, is recognized differently for everyone of the coronation ceremony and Sartre. He is these people. When young women committed suicide, Clamence is obviously evil and guilty. In his opinion, the coronation ceremony explained and accused his generation including his enemies and himself. Clamence's life is full of good deeds, but he is a hypocrite and knows it. His monologue is full of self-justification and confession of those who are torn apart by his sin but can not fully recognize it. Sitting in a bar in Amsterdam, he fell into his own personal hell and invited readers to follow him. When talking about the story of Clamence, Camus obviously requires compassion and explanation, understanding and reproach. Clamence is a monster, but Clamence is another person (Aronson 2004, 192-200)