Point Out Of Books Caligula
| Title | : | Caligula |
| Author | : | Albert Camus |
| Book Format | : | Mass Market Paperback |
| Book Edition | : | Collection Folio théâtre (n° 6); Édition de Pierre-Louis Rey |
| Pages | : | Pages: 224 pages |
| Published | : | September 1st 1993 by Gallimard (first published 1944) |
| Categories | : | Plays. Classics. Philosophy. Drama. Cultural. France. Fiction |

Albert Camus
Mass Market Paperback | Pages: 224 pages Rating: 4.08 | 8570 Users | 522 Reviews
Narrative To Books Caligula
Ange en quête d'absolu ? Monstre sanguinaire ? Avant la guerre, Albert Camus conçoit Caligula, ainsi que Sisyphe ou Meursault (L'Étranger), comme un héros de l'Absurde. En 1945, la pièce est reçue comme une fable sur les horreurs du nazisme. Ses versions et ses mises en scène successives, l'évolution de la sensibilité du public ont contribué à faire de Caligula une des figures les plus troublantes de notre théâtre. À l'image du tyran se superposent, dans notre mémoire, les visages de Gérard Philipe, qui créa le rôle, et celui d'Albert Camus, qui mêla toujours au besoin de tendresse et à l'exigence de pureté une étrange «fixation au meurtre» et «cette violence intérieure» (Jean Grenier) qui anime son empereur romain.Particularize Books As Caligula
| Original Title: | Caligula |
| ISBN: | 2070386708 (ISBN13: 9782070386703) |
| Edition Language: | French |
Rating Out Of Books Caligula
Ratings: 4.08 From 8570 Users | 522 ReviewsEvaluate Out Of Books Caligula
Because what I want is to live, and to be happy. Neither, to my mind, is possible if one pushes the absurd to its logical conclusions. As you see, I'm quite an ordinary sort of man. True, there are moment when, to feel free of them, I desire the death of those I love, or I hanker after women from whom the ties of family or friendship debar me. Were logic everything, I'd kill or fornicate on such occasions. But I consider that these passing fancies have no great importance. If everyone set toNot to be able to get something won't stop the desire to have it; Caligula "[...] needs the moon, or happiness, or immortality, something that is perhaps demented, but not from this world." Plot: Caligula wants the impossible.
4.5all these executions have an equal importance-from which it follows that none has any.This world has no importance; once a man realizes that, he wins his freedom. And that is why I hate you, you and your kind; because you are not free.I want to drown the sky in the sea, to infuse ugliness with beauty, to wring a laugh from pain. And living, my dear, is the opposite of loving. All true passion has a spice of cruelty. There's nothing like hatred for developing the intelligence. All I know is

This play by Camus on the concept of absurd is based upon the Lives of the Twelve Caesars by the Latin historian, Suetonius. According to the work, Caius Caesar Caligula, third of the twelve Caesars, who came to power in 37AD at the age of twenty-five, ruled for four years until he was assassinated in 41AD by his Patricians.*The reason of his assassination was his cruelty against everyone, which led him to murder people on whims. There are different accounts on his changed state of mind after
Quotes:1.CALIGULA: I also know what youre thinking. What disturbances for the death of a woman! No, its not that. I believe I recall, its true, that some days ago a woman that I loved died. But what is love? A slight thing. This death is nothing, I swear it to you. It is only the omen of a truth which makes the moon necessary to me. Its a truth entirely simple and entirely clear, a little thing, but difficult to discover and heavy to bear.HELICON: And what is this truth then, Caius?CALIGULA:
the play shows Caligula the Roman Emperor, torn by the death of Drusilla, his sister and lover.Caligula responds to her death by beginning a reign of terror against the Roman citizens, but this will not be the only reason .. and wouldn't be a deep interpretation of Caligula's brutality , bloodthirstiness and sadism...it cant be only attributed to an accident .. it shows that his feelings of insecurity and tendency to violence were already present.... only his pain and misery for loosing her give
all men are caligula's subjects. ergo, all men are guilty and shall die. it is only a matter of time and patience.THIS WAS BRILLIANT how on earth did camus make me sympathize with caligula of all people?! absolutely remarkable!! it takes true ability + empathy to make someone feel for possibly the cruelest and vilest of all the roman emperors.


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