Emergence of the Existential Self: A Study of the Void in The First Manby Albert Camus
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Department of English
Abstract
In his posthumously published autobiographical novel The First Man, Camus recalls this
period of his life with a mixture of pain and affection as he describes conditions of harsh poverty
(the three-room apartment had no bathroom, no electricity, and no running water) relieved by
hunting trips, family outings, childhood games, and scenic flashes of sun, seashore, mountain,
and desert.It is the most sentimental and personal of all his works. The story of Jacques
Cormery's return to Algeria and his reflections on his coming of age is filled with inchoate
longing, for the Algeria of his youth, for the Father who died when he was just a child, for the
love of a beautiful but deaf and distant Mother and for a moral code by which to live."The First
Man" records a mind in motion--a mind creating a masterpiece.
