Description: Explores how the writings of Albert Camus matter in the 2020s, as a profoundly independent thinker who addressed problems which trouble us today: those of nihilism, hatred, incivility, ecological collapse and authoritarianism
Brief description: Matthew Sharpe is associate professor of philosophy at Deakin University. He is the coauthor of Philosophy as a Way of Life: History, Dimensions, Directions (with M. Ure) and author of Camus, Philosophe: To Return to Our Beginnings as well as articles on the history of philosophy, and political, critical and psychoanalytic theory.
Review Quotes: "Albert Camus is not to be read, he is to be lived. In a world where the Human can feel redundant, a mere subject, Matthew Sharpe reminds us that someone saw it all and he has a way out. Camus is not for our time, he is for all times." --Professor Stan Grant, Journalist and Chair of Australian-Indigenous Belonging at Charles Sturt University, Australia