The Specter of Narration and Hypocrisy in Albert Camus’ The Fall

Pertanika Journal of Social Sciences and Humanities 28 (1):207-220 (2020)
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Abstract

In this paper, I explored what Sartre referred to as Camus’ ‘most beautiful and least understood novel,’ The Fall. As a methodology, I applied textual hermeneutics to immerse in the text and got out of it what I deemed as the crux of its existentialism as founded in the two-in-one leitmotif of narration and hypocrisy. In Clamence, there was a profound need – a specter that lingered and haunted – to narrate his life, especially the fall that triggered it and the judgment that allowed him to do it. I argued then that the nature of the text reflected a deep sense of narration that stemmed from hypocrisy, in which Clamence branded himself as ‘judge-penitent’ – what such a life entails, how it freed him, and how it mirrored life-callings or vocations in all walks of life.

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Jan Gresil Kahambing
University of Macau

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References found in this work

The Republic.Paul Plato & Shorey - 2000 - ePenguin. Edited by Cynthia Johnson, Holly Davidson Lewis & Benjamin Jowett.
The life of the mind.Hannah Arendt - 1978 - New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich.
Ordinary vices.Judith N. Shklar - 1984 - Cambridge, Mass.: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press.

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