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Author Fitch, Brian T.

Title The fall : a matter of guilt / Brian T. Fitch.

Publication Info. New York : Twayne Publishers; London : Prentice Hall, [1995]
©1995

Copies

Location Call No. Status
 West Hartford, Noah Webster Library - Non Fiction  Z843 CAMUS F    Check Shelf
Description xii, 136 pages ; 23 cm.
Series Twayne's masterwork studies ; no. 133
Twayne's masterwork studies ; no. 133.
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 129-132) and index.
Contents Literary and Historical Context. 1. The Historical Context. 2. The Importance of the Work. 3. Critical Reception -- A Reading. 4. Camus and The Fall. 5. The Two Worlds of The Fall. 6. Clamence the Protagonist: The Parisian Lawyer. 7. Clamence the Storyteller: The Judge-Penitent. 8. Clamence's Unseen Companion. 9. The Role of the Reader. 10. Rereading and Interpreting The Fall -- 11. Conclusion.
Summary "May I, monsieur, offer my services without running the risk of intruding?" Thus begins The Fall (La Chute), the last novel of the Algerian-born French writer Albert Camus (1913-60). The two-character work - which has perplexed and disturbed readers since its publication in 1956 - is in essence a dramatic monologue, the confession of a former Parisian attorney, Jean-Baptiste Clamence, to a stranger in an Amsterdam bar. As the narrative unfolds, the reader is increasingly drawn into the role of the listener and ultimately comes to feel personally threatened by Clamence's revelations.
For its originality, its intricacy, and its ingenious construction, The Fall represents the culminating masterpiece in a career that earned its writer the Nobel Prize in literature in 1957. Yet The Fall is also less widely known to readers than other works by Camus, such as the novels The Stranger and The Plague, the essay The Myth of Sisyphus, and the play Caligula.
Arguing that The Fall is Camus's "most complex and enigmatic literary creation . . . and his most successful creation," Brian T. Fitch, a leading Camusian scholar, here offers readers a peerless guide to the novel, the first full-length study to explore the work progressively from the standpoint of the reader's interaction with it. After detailing the biographical and historical events shaping the writing of The Fall, assessing the novel's literary importance, and surveying critics' and scholars' reception to it, Fitch delivers a penetrating reading of the work, drawing on reception theory to demonstrate how Camus crafted his novel to affect readers so subtly yet so profoundly. Readers new to the novel, as well as longtime Camus devotees, will appreciate this soundly presented, forthright analysis of what in Fitch's estimation is Camus's most difficult yet most significant achievement.
Included in the volume are a Chronology, Notes and References, a Selected Bibliography, and an Index.
Subject Camus, Albert, 1913-1960. Chute.
Indexed Term French fiction
ISBN 0805783601
9780805783605
0805744525 paperback
9780805744521 paperback
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