Dramatic Conventions in The Works of Albert Camus and Eugène Ionesco
Dramatic Conventions in The Works of Albert Camus and Eugène Ionesco
Dramatic Conventions in The Works of Albert Camus and Eugène Ionesco
A Thesis
Presented to
Samantha Piede
Spring 2018
Directed by
Samantha Piede
Graduate School by
Thesis Committee:
(signature on file)
_____________________________________
Dr. Dominic Ording, Research Advisor
(signature on file)
_____________________________________
Dr. William Archibald, Committee Member
(signature on file)
_____________________________________
Dr. Caleb Corkery, Committee Member
By
Samantha Piede
Millersville, Pennsylvania
According to film critic Henry A. Giroux, art of a given era “does more than
entertain; it offers up subject positions, mobilizes desires, influences us unconsciously…
and incorporates ideologies that represent the outcome of struggles marked by the
historical realities of power and the deep anxieties of the times” (Giroux 585). Thus,
theatrical performance often presents audience members with the opportunity to work out
their contemporary anxieties a safe, imaginative space. Among these anxieties is the ever
pervasive “ubi sunt”: the inevitable passing of life into death. Knowing that man lives in
the face of an inevitable, unchangeable death, personifies what is referred to in the
philosophical writing of Albert Camus as “the absurd.” These themes were pervasive in
the Parisian theatrical scene post-World War II, most notably in two immigrant
playwrights: Camus himself and Eugène Ionesco, two contemporaries whose works
depict circumstances that are congruent with the philosophical concept of Absurdism.
However, though their plotlines and shared philosophical notion of the Absurd are
similar, their distinctions in theatrical convention determine for the audience whether
their creative works come across to audience members as didactic (à la Camus) or merely
expressive (à la Ionesco). This investigation aims to provide a philosophical foundation
for the Absurd, trace its pervasiveness within the theatrical works of Camus (Caligula,
The State of Siege) and Ionesco (Exit the King, Rhinoceros), and determine how their
particular stylistic and cosmetic choices differentiate one from the other. How do minor
changes like stage conventions dramatically impact whether a play treats a theme
didactically or expressively?
Table of Contents
Introduction ……………………………………………5
Chapter 1: ……………………………………...…….8
A Brief History of Existentialism
Chapter 2: …………………………………………..20
Distinguishing Camus’ Absurdity
Chapter 3: ………………………………………….33
The Absurd in the Face of Death:
Camus’ Caligula
Chapter 4: ………………………………………….48
The Absurd in the Face of Death:
Ionesco’s Exit the King
Chapter 5: ………………………………………….59
Absurdism Expanded: Rebels and Revolt
Chapter 6: …………………………………………63
The Absurd in the Face of
Totalitarianism: Camus’ State of Siege
Chapter 7: …………………………………………82
The Absurd in the Face of
Totalitarianism: Ionesco’s Rhinoceros
Introduction
According to film critic Henry A. Giroux, art of a given era “does more than
and incorporates ideologies that represent the outcome of struggles marked by the
historical realities of power and the deep anxieties of the times” (Giroux 585). Thus,
theatrical performance often presents audience members with the opportunity to work out
their contemporary anxieties in a safe, imaginative space. Among these anxieties is the
ever pervasive “ubi sunt”: the inevitable passing of life into death. Knowing that man is
destined to die, what implications are there for human life, and what we should do in the
face of it? What does it mean to live justly, knowing that we are destined to die? These
themes were pervasive in the Parisian theatrical scene post-World War II, most notably in
two immigrant playwrights: Albert Camus and Eugène Ionesco. These contemporaries
shared multiple similarities in biography and subject matter. Both immigrated to Paris
during wartime, both studied philosophy in their undergraduate work, and both penned
dramas that were compatible with the philosophical concept of Absurdism. As such, it is
retained affection for Camus. When asked in a 1963 interview about whether he had
been influenced by The Myth of Sisyphus and The Stranger, Ionesco replied, “Camus?
Perhaps. I esteem him very highly” (Schechner 167). In a 1971 interview with Claude
Bonnefoy, when asked about the solitude of his recurring character, Bérenger, Ionesco
would recommend, unsolicited, that Bonneofy read Camus in order to better understand
the character: “Anyway, what I mean is… I think one should re-read Camus…” (119).
This points to a perceived connection, at least from Ionesco’s perspective, between his
Some scholars are, however, doubtful about this comparison. In his 1986 book,
The Existential and Its Exits, Livio A.C. Dobrez investigates existential and absurdist
themes in the works of Ionesco, Samuel Beckett, Jean Genet, and Harold Pinter, and,
philosophy of Heidegger and Sartre, he devotes little space to Camus. His comparative
analysis takes up slightly over one page, which he justifies by declaiming, “In spite of
Ionesco’s sympathy for Camus, it is worth noting in passing that this parallel is not much
more profitable” (178). He adds, “If there is a similarity, it is misleading and largely
explicable in terms of Camus’ dependence on the idea of angst for his theory of the
Absurd” (178).
makes sweeping generalizations about Camus’ philosophy of the Absurd, yet he neglects
to include even a single text written by Camus in his list of references. As such, it is
unclear how Dobrez has come to the conclusion that the two are incompatible. Asserting
that the two are highly incomparable ignores not only similarities in their relationships
with death, but also the explicit subject matter of their theatrical works. Both Camus’
Caligula (1938) and Ionesco’s Exit the King (1962) feature a monarch devolving into
insanity upon facing the reality of death. Both State of Siege (1948) and Rhinoceros
(1960) revolve around the plight of a city plagued by a pandemic, one that, in each,
represents totalitarian rule. As such, perhaps the assertion that there is no reasonable
comparison between Camus and Ionesco results from a lack of familiarity with the
former’s work.
potentially correct if we compare their theatrical works in terms of style. Though their
depictions of the philosophical notion of the Absurd, death anxiety, and ways to seek
justice in an absurdist world are similar, their choices in theatrical convention are
strikingly distinct, resulting in very different plays. Where Ionesco uses an abundance of
imagery, sound, and physical movement throughout his plays, Camus relies heavily on
dialogue. While these stylistic divergences are seemingly minor, they result in two plays
with very similar philosophies and themes developing drastically different conclusions:
trace its pervasiveness within the theatrical works of Camus (Caligula, The State of
Siege) and Ionesco (Exit the King, Rhinoceros), and determine how their particular
stylistic and cosmetic choices distinguish the plays as either expressive of the absurd or
prescriptive of the absurd. How do minor changes like stage conventions dramatically
Chapter 1
The Absurdism of Ionesco and Camus finds its roots in the history of
roots of existentialism extend deeply into western history, even beyond St. Augustine to
the pre-Socratic philosophers and the author of the Book of Job” (Spanos 1). Many of
the themes of this philosophical movement (freedom, isolation, the burden of choice) are
timeless and can find their roots in literature and philosophy spanning decades. At its
determining. Existential sentiments, though, showed the sharpest and most organized
physics. The discovery of Newton’s laws of motion -- ones that, without exception,
governed the patterns of the universe -- developed in the public a stronger notion of
causality: “if we measure accurately enough, and understand the laws and forces of
nature, then the future becomes predictable” (Feldman 70). Philosophers began to
extrapolate these findings; if stars and planets were subject to cause and effect, why
should humanity be any different? David Feldman, in his book Chaos & Fractals: An
deterministic, if the world is fundamentally material and the objects of the world obey
fixed deterministic laws, then in a sense the future has already been written – it is an
inevitable consequence of the way things are today. Nevertheless, we perceive that we as
individuals are capable of making real choices…” (70 – 71). This philosophical theory is
known as determinism, which places humans, like the rest of the universe, as objects in
independently, a determinist holds that this weighing of options will always result in a
Determinist philosophy blossomed during the first half of the nineteenth century,
Freedom of the Will, Schopenhauer draws direct parallels to Newtonian physics and uses
the comparison of a billiard ball on a table to explain the causal nature of that belief:
“[A]s little as a ball on a billiard table can move before receiving an impact, so
little can a man get up from his chair before being drawn or driven by a motive.
But then his getting up is as necessary and inevitable as the rolling of a ball after
the impact. And to expect that anyone will do something to which absolutely no
interest impels them is the same as to expect that a piece of wood shall move
equation of causes and effects, of actions that are predicated upon motives, humanity’s
future becomes limited. According to this worldview, one can experience the illusion of
choice, but not the actuality; all of our experiences and struggles were the result of
inevitability and a fixed set of circumstances. This robs an individual of any sense of
agency, and each becomes merely a pawn of forces beyond his or her control.
Schopenhauer writes, “…determinism stands firm; for fifteen hundred years attempts to
undermine it have been made in vain. They have been urged by certain queer ideas which
we know quite well, but dare not call entirely by their name. In consequence of it,
however, the world becomes a puppet show worked by wires (motives) without its even
being possible to see for whose amusement. If the piece has a plan, then a fate is the
inevitabilities at the hand of an external puppet master can be both demotivating and
potentially sinister. If man is no longer viewed as responsible for his actions, many of
our societal structures would be called into question. For example, Western systems of
justice were, and are, predicated upon the belief that man may justly be punished or
rehabilitated for crimes because he had the ability to choose his involvement.
Philosopher William James confronted this issue in his 1884 lecture, “The Dilemma of
deterministic universe and man as object, rather than subject. A world without choice is
also one without tragedy or triumph, as it lacks any moral value. He uses the example of
a domestic violence case in Brockton, in which a man shoots his wife five times and, to
finish the job, smashes her skull with a rock. “We feel that,” he writes, “although a
perfect mechanical fit to the rest of the universe, it is a bad moral fit, and that something
else would really have been better in its place” (James 10). However, in a determinist
world, this wish is illogical; regardless of moral inclinations, the murder is merely
inevitable. Ergo, regretting or moralizing about the action is moot. James concludes,
“Determinism, in denying that anything else can be in its stead, virtually defines the
happened in the 19th century was that there was an emerging sense that science, which
made the world look like a mechanism governed by natural laws, had drained any
universe…People need a reason for living and choosing the values they live.” (Bragg)
This period marks the first use of the term “existential” philosophically;
Kierkegaard scholar Jean Wahl synopsized the existentialist’s position as, “…the
philosophy of existence is essentially the affirmation that existence has no essence” (qtd.
in Lewis 15). Existentialism conceives of man as subject, rather than object. An object
may be acted upon by outside forces, pushed and prodded into taking a particular action.
However, a subject has agency: the ability to assert will over an object in order to propel
it towards an outcome of the subject’s choosing, rather than passively accepting the
direction of its prodding. Existentialists hold that this agency is unique to humanity
because only humanity has the option for diversity in action and development. Thus, the
position is often synopsized as “existence precedes essence”: one first exists, and through
collection The Concept of Dread (1844), Kierkegaard focuses on the sort of phenomena
that James notes are illogical in accordance with determinism: impulses of choice and
out, the presence of dread would be functionally useless, as dreading a future outcome is
Kierkegaard points to the presence of dread as a sign of man’s freedom, as it provides the
impulse to consider one’s options. He writes, “He who is educated in dread is educated
by possibility, and only the man who is educated by possibility is educated in accordance
with his infinity” (Kierkegaard 253). With dread, one is provided with options and the
possibility to choose from alternatives. This would render moral situations like the one
that James provides to be assessed: as righteous or sinful. With choice comes the option
use his conclusions about dread in conjunction with his faith. To Kierkegaard, faith in a
deterministic universe does not render the same value as faith freely chosen; there is no
solace in a faith of inevitability. Man can appreciate and understand his faith when he
accepts that it is chosen freely, as agency comes with a greater responsibility to choose
correctly. Kierkegaard cites Genesis, in which Adam disobeys God by eating the fruit of
the tree of knowledge. In this example, his responsibility was actualized by his ability to
choose: “The infinite possibility of being able, awakened by the prohibiting, draws closer
for the fact that this possibility indicates a possibility as its consequence” (41).
In the mid-20th century, after the close of two world wars, existentialism grew and
flourished; “what had been a tendency became a flood” (Koyré 533). “Hardly a day goes
“Usually it is a society lady who asks for this information, but tomorrow it may be my
char-woman or the ticket collector on the Metro” (qtd. in At the Existentialist Café 165).
The philosophy became not only popular during this period, but fashionable. The
philosophy became associated with youth culture in Paris in the late 1940s, to the extent
at which existential philosophers gained celebrity status: “By day, they hoped for a
sighting of the legendary writers – Camus with his movie-star looks, De Beauvoir with
her turban and attractively hooded eyes, and Sartre with his pipe, his dumpy form and his
factors. Firstly, he notes that the public expressed a “rather widespread dissatisfaction
with academic philosophy, even before the war” (534). Many Parisians were
discontented with academic philosophy and its distance from the most pressing social
problems of the day. This is apparent in the early writings of Wahl, who, in his essay
Philosophy” (1933) declared, “The more the human being sees himself in his existence,
the more he will see his union with the reality of the world; he will live his being-in-the-
world instead of putting it into question. To the acuity of his consciousness there will
correspond the density of the representation – if the word ‘representation’ can still be
applicable – that he will have of the world, or rather the density with which the world will
isolation, freedom, responsibility, and absurdity, resonated in a world that had recently
experienced dissolution. He writes, “… the state of war brought about the ‘dissolution of
the bourgeois-capitalistic world and of the desperate situation of the European middle
classes, that, having lost not only their earthly belongings but even all hope to recover
them, and thus confronted with the ‘nothingness’ of ruin, fall back, so to say, on their
existence, [the] last piece of property of which they are still owners” (Koyré 536). In a
world that had been ravaged by two world wars, “the assumption that humankind was on
an unblocked path of perpetual and frustrated advancement became untenable, and the
It is in this world that philosophers like Jean-Paul Sartre, one of the leading
existentialists philosophers during this period, found a captive audience. Though major
institutions that had professed higher meaning – belief in the state, belief in political
rendered untenable, humanity was not left entirely afloat. In a world plagued by nihilism,
time with both Sartre and Camus as a youth, having frequented the same Café de Flores
in which they produced their writing, recalls, “Existentialism became for some of us the
only possible bridge between our thoughtlessness, which our milieu had assiduously
fostered, and our entering the world. Thanks to this ‘philosophy,’ and those who founded
it in France or had adopted it, we became conscious of the position we occupied and of its
possibilities” (138).
1946 essay based on a lecture he had delivered at Club Maintenant the year previous. In
it, Sartre aims to dispel the notion that existentialism’s conception of radical freedom
leads to nihilism; rather, he believed that humanity was in a unique position to harness
To illustrate how man differs from other objects and forms of life, Sartre uses the
purpose. Its essence, or purpose, is determined before its existence, or creation, based on
its function; it is given a sharp edge and a handle because it will later be used to cut
paper. Though some religions conceive a vision of man as the creation of a “superlative
artisan” (Sartre 21), Sartre rejects that idea, indicating that a man has not been designed
to have single, pre-delineated purpose. He serves many roles within his lifetime, none of
which are primary to others, and he is given the freedom to select them for himself.
Sartre writes, “If a man as the existentialist sees him is not definable, it is because to
begin with he is nothing. He will not be anything until later, and then he will be what he
makes of himself. Thus, there is no human nature, because there is no God to have a
conception of it” (Sartre 21). (Here, Sartre parts ways with Kierkegaard to offer an
unique to humanity due to its possession of free will. This will allows individuals to
make choices and, in turn, create themselves. Sartre stresses that this also makes each
person responsible for the choices they make; if they can choose freely, the consequences
that we create our essence over the course of our lives with each choice that we make.
Once a choice exists in the past, it becomes cemented in the edifice of time. Thus, one’s
essence is only complete upon one’s death, when choices are no longer available. Only
at this point does each person’s essence become determinate and final. (“Existentialism is
a Humanism”)
This not to say that humanity is without barriers to action. Sartre would also
speak of “facticity,” which refers to the factual elements beyond human control. For
example, the fact of a person’s birth is not within their power, nor are the circumstances
(the fact that we are born as human instead of something else, the biological limits of that
species, the time in which we are born, etc.). However, Sartre asserts that our freedom
comes in our ability to explore within these parameters. The boundaries set, but not our
series of resulting corollaries. For instance, if one is able to choose freely, there is not a
singular, common destiny to which one must succumb. Moreover, if one creates one’s
own essence without a predetermined best course of action, this opens the possibility of
one’s choices being objectively meaningless and only having subjective value. While
this can be freeing, it can also be daunting, for man becomes fully responsible for what he
becomes.
essay, he relates an encounter with a former student seeking guidance. The student
implored Sartre to advise him about joining the Free French; he was drawn to combat out
of both a desire to avenge the death of his brother, who had been killed in a previous
insurrection, and to fight against the Nazi soldiers. However, he was also the sole
provider for his ailing mother. Which path should he choose? Sartre uses this example
to illustrate man’s freedom in making this choice and how his choice helps to define him.
If he chooses his mother, he will show that he prioritizes the safety of his family (a single
familiar life) over the ideal of fighting for his country (many distant lives); if he chooses
to fight, the reverse is true. Ultimately, though, the essence of the young man will be
defined by his choice, so he must choose wisely. Sartre offers no preferable solution,
instead leaving the final decision to the discretion of his readers: “You are free, so
choose; in other words, invent” (Sartre 33). This situation would be a familiar one for
many French youth, some of whom had faced similar dilemmas in their decision to join
or abstain from the Free French. (At the Existentialist Café 7-9) (Sartre 30 -33)
Koyré places some of Sartre’s success and celebrity with his ability to anchor his
philosophical ideas in these germane, concrete situations, particularly through the arts.
This “has enabled him to translate his philosophy into literature – and literature has
always played the most important part in French intellectual life – and to present his
worldview and his analysis of man not only under the form of a highly technical, abstruse
and difficult book [Being and Nothingness], but in that of very successful novels and
plays” (Koyré 534). Because of its focus on the subjective experience, existentialism
mid-20th century used literature, poetry, and theatre as mechanisms to express their
philosophy. This is seen notably in the novels of Simone de Beauvoir (All Men are
Mortal, The Mandarins) and the short stories of Miguel de Unamuno (“Saint Manuel the
Good, Martyr”). The most prolific existential fiction, however, would be found in the
theatre.
From the situations presented on stage and the way these situations resolve, the audience
derives insights based on that outcome. Sartre’s paramour, and existentialist in her own
right, Simone de Beauvoir found this approach common in many of his theatrical works.
In her first American tour in 1947, she delivered a lecture entitled Existentialist Theatre
at Wellesley College, in which she analyzed three primary existentialist works of theatre,
two plays by Sartre (The Flies and No Exit) and one by his close friend and
contemporary, Albert Camus (Caligula), in order to explain the structure and goals of
existentialist theatre. Beauvoir asserts that the theatre is a natural setting for playwrights
who hold that existence precedes essence. That is, a situation may be presented as it
would occur in life, and only after stepping back and watching the events unfold may one
find truth. In the lecture, she quoted Sartre himself on a theatre of existential freedom:
“[The] heroes are freedoms caught in a trap like all of us. What are the ways out? Each
character will be nothing but the choice of a way out and will equal no more than the
chosen way out…” (qtd. in Gilbert 114). Beauvoir indicates that, based on the actions
and consequences of the main characters, audience members can determine whether their
that at least some part of what the existentialists attempt to do is best done in art and not
philosophy?” (Kaufman 49). By anchoring their ideas into concrete situations on which
man’s freedom may be applied, existentialism could be applied not only theoretically, but
practically.
counted Camus among the best of these literary existentialists, this association was, in
Camus’ eyes, misplaced. Although he admitted to some shared ground with Sartre’s
interview in 1945 with Les Nouvelles Littéraires, he would proclaim directly, “I am not
would share a close, yet tumultuous friendship, culminating in a bitter falling out in 1952,
they diverged on some crucial philosophical tenets, ones distinct enough to form a unique
Chapter 2
silence and absences. His family had no electricity, no running water, no newspapers, no
books, no radio, few visitors at home, and no sense of the wider ‘life-worlds’ of others”
(147). Born in 1913, Camus would have less than one year with his father before he was
recruited to the Algerien regiment and died on the battlefield. His mother, who was both
illiterate and deaf in one ear, could only find work as a housekeeper and used her meager
earnings to support herself, the young Camus, his brother Lucien, and her aging mother.
Camus would transcend poverty through education, enrolling in the Lycée Bugeaud at
nineteen and, later, the University of Algiers. Although, upon graduation, he had
postpone those plans indefinitely. Camus would take up a series of odd jobs to keep
himself financially secure, including political organizer, actor, and, in 1937, journalist.
(Rhein xi)
During his time on staff at the independent newspaper, the Alger republicain,
Camus was tasked with taking on a column entitled “The Reading Room,” in which he
reviewed recently published French-language literature (Zaretsky 16). Among these was
Sartre’s Nausea, which he reviewed in 1938, declaring that the text “moves with a ‘vigor
and certainty’ reminiscent of Kafka” (Aronson 12). He praised the work as:
“… the first novel from a writer from whom everything may be expected. So
painful a lucidity, are indications of limitless gifts. These are grounds for
welcoming Nausea as the first summons of an original and vigorous mind whose
lessons and works to come we are impatient to see.” (qtd. in Aronson 12)
Though the two would not meet in person until the premiere of Sartre’s The Flies
in 1943, Camus would relay in a letter to one of his girlfriends, Lucette Meurer, that
Sartre’s Nausea remained “very close to a part of [him]” (qtd. in Aronson 11), and he
would continue producing reviews for the Alger republicain of Sartre’s literary works,
including The Wall in 1939. As such, it is unsurprising that Camus would make explicit
allusions to Sartre’s body of work in his 1942 philosophical text, The Myth of Sisyphus,
in characterizing his notion of the ‘absurd’: “This discomfort in the face of man's own
inhumanity, this incalculable tumble before the image of what we are, this ‘nausea,’ as a
writer of today calls it, is also the absurd” (Myth of Sisyphus 6). Despite this claim,
though, that Naussea was representative of the absurd, Sartre and Camus would remain
divided on this idea throughout the course of their friendship and even after it had
dissolved.
What is this notion of “the absurd” upon which they conflicted? Camus describes
out of a state of contemplation. Thoughts of the absurd often elude us due to what Camus
calls “a mechanical life.” When we are engaged in a state of constant physical activity --
work, eating, entertaining, sleeping -- we often fail to question ourselves about why we
do what we do. However, “one day, the ‘why’ arises, and everything begins…” When
we are forced to examine our motives and justifications for how we live, we are, as
Camus points out, rapt to discover some contradictions. This is the nature of the absurd.
(Myth of Sisyphus 5)
Camus indicates that absurdity is the result of a paradox between the human mind
and the living world. The human mind is, he explains, programmed for reason and a
desire to seek order. We observe the world and use the faculties of reason to draw
conclusions about how it operates. He calls this desire the “nostalgia for unity” (Myth of
Sisyphus 6). Humans seek to reconcile all of their observations with one another and
come to a definite “truth.” He writes, “That nostalgia for unity, that appetite for the
absolute illustrates the essential impulse of the human drama. But the fact of that
Sisyphus 6). However, despite the human mind’s capacity and desire to make sense of
the world, Camus notes that some naturally occurring phenomena defy logic and, when
Camus indicates that the absurd is a comparative term. He illustrates this with an
example: “If I accuse an innocent man of a monstrous crime, if I tell a virtuous man that
he has coveted his own sister, he will reply that this is absurd… The virtuous man
illustrates by that reply the definitive antinomy existing between the deed I am attributing
to him and his lifelong principles. ‘It’s absurd’ means ‘It’s impossible,’ but also ‘It’s
contradictory’” (Myth of Sisyphus 10). Thus, Camus believes the character of the
absurd lies in that antinomy: a naturally occurring paradox. A situation becomes ‘absurd’
when two elements clash with one another. Camus further characterizes this with an
example of a man defending himself against a machine gun assault with a sword. While
neither the existence of a man using a sword nor the use of machine guns are absurd in
and of themselves, their placement together creates an absurd situation through their
disproportion. Thus, the absurd “bursts from the comparison between a bare fact and a
certain reality, between an action and the world that transcends it” (Myth of Sisyphus,
10).
The contradiction on which The Myth of Sisyphus hinges is echoed in his play,
Caligula: “Men die, and they are not happy” (Caligula 8). The proof of human death is
not a point that Camus spends much time discussing, quipping that it has been “I am
limiting myself here to making a rapid classification and to pointing out these obvious
themes. They run through all literatures and all philosophies. Everyday conversation
Regardless, this fact does carry with it some interesting corollaries and problems that
create absurdity.
Camus draws parallels between the fact of human death and the Greek myth that
inspired the essays’ title. The Myth of Sisyphus refers to Sisyphus, king of Corinth, who
was often at odds with the gods, having “stolen their secrets” by revealing to the father of
the abducted Aegina how to retrieve her from Zeus. Additionally, he had managed to
temporarily cheat his own death by ensnaring Hades in a pair of handcuffs under the
guise of teaching him how they worked. According to the myth, as punishment, he is
tasked with an eternity of hard labor. Every day, he is doomed to roll a massive boulder
up a steep hill, and, every day, the boulder will roll back down again. This creates an
Camus establishes that, like Sisyphus’ efforts with the boulder, any attempts
humans make to develop their minds or bodies are ultimately also rendered futile. The
fact of death renders all goal-oriented behavior ultimately meaningless; though it may
sustain one in the moment, the goal dies with the person. Why sustain a body that is
meant to die? Is there something about living that is objectively preferable to dying?
Individuals spends their lives attempting to grow, learn, and contribute to the world, only
to lose all of this in the face of death. Thus, human life itself is paradoxical and absurd.
Camus writes, “And carrying this absurd logic to its conclusion, I must admit that
the struggle implies a total absence of hope…, a continual rejection…, and a conscious
dissatisfaction” (Myth of Sisyphus 11). Here, he describes the state of nihilism and its
resulting existential angst: the world is, in his eyes, devoid of meaning and reason, which
is painfully at odds with the human desire to create purposefully. Thus, throughout the
essay, Camus aims to determine what the logical conclusion is to being faced with an
absurd existence: “Judging whether life is or is not worth living amounts to answering the
occurs afterward, creates an unsettling anxiety, or angst. Angst results directly from
one’s ability to make choices: to select one outcome over another; this parallels Sartre’s
own theories of responsibility for one’s choices. So, knowing that we will die, are there
One of the options discussed in the essay is that humans can adopt a transcendent
view of the universe that goes beyond human understanding; one could create and sustain
a metaphysical explanation for the universe, often a theistic one. This option is
unacceptable to Camus. In his journals, Camus would write, “I do not believe in God,
and I am not an atheist” (Notebooks: 1951-1959), and he would notoriously lambast firm
religious beliefs on the grounds that all religious claims are metaphysical and claim to
have knowledge of a world beyond the senses. Camus critiques, and lampoons, several
Christian existentialist philosophers who use absurdity to create dogma that reconciles
Kierkegaard’s The Concept of Dread, in which he applies the concepts of freedom and
dread to religious devotion. He notes that the concept of the absurd can be seen in
Kierkegaard had argued that it was a sign that humanity should undergo “the sacrifice of
the intellect” and take a leap of faith that paradoxes such as this could only be understood
in the eyes of God. Camus rejected that conclusion on the basis that it is still speculative,
religious reason to placate his intellect. “But this ‘therefore’ is superfluous,” he writes.
states, “I want to know whether I can live with what I know and with that alone. I am
told again that here the intelligence must sacrifice its pride and the reason bow down.
But if I recognize the limits of the reason, I do not therefore negate it, recognizing its
relative powers” (Myth of Sisyphus 14). Camus also rejects suicide, on the grounds that it
is merely expediting the inevitable. It does not solve the issue of the absurd, but, rather,
is “acceptance in the extreme” (19). Rather than attempt to resolve the angst created by
What, then, is preferable? Rather than create a structure to explain away the
what he calls “revolt.” The act of revolt requires us to acknowledge our ephemerality and
persist in spite of it. He clarifies, “It is not aspiration, for it is devoid of hope” (19).
Rather than attempt to find a true meaning to life, he advocates that we merely stop
expecting to find one. He writes, “That revolt gives life its value. Spread out over the
whole length of a life, it restores its majesty to that life. To a man devoid of blinders,
there is no finer sight than that of the intelligence at grips with a reality that transcends it”
(19).
existentialists, he is not aiming to establish a position on what can be known about the
true nature of the universe; the realm of metaphysics fails to interest Camus due to the
fact that all positions are equally unsubstantiated. “The only one I know,” he writes, “is
freedom of thought and action” (Myth of Sisyphus 19). If there is no meaning, then there
is no reason why one action is preferable to another. This allows us the freedom to
follow our passions. While we cannot guarantee an overarching meaning, we can still
experience the pleasure of the experiences themselves. This harkens back to some of
Camus’ earlier essays in The Wrong Side and the Right Side (1937) and Nuptuals (1938),
“At the moment, my whole kingdom is of this world. This sun and these shadows,
this warmth and this cold rising from the depths of the air: why wonder if
where the sun sheds its plenty as a greeting to my pity? I can say and in a moment
I shall say that what counts is to be human and simple. No, what counts is to be
true, and then everything fits in, humanity and simplicity. When am I truer than
In Sisyphus, Camus uses multiple examples of revolt in the face of the absurd, most of
whom also find their value in the sensory realm. This is seen most notably in the
inclusion of the fictional libertine, Don Juan, whose legend revolves around his sensual
encounters with multiple different women. He also extends this value to Sisyphus
himself, indicating that, even in his imprisonment, he can derive satisfaction from
rejecting the notion of purpose and thus being able to continue his sensory experiences:
“But Sisyphus teaches the higher fidelity that negates the gods and raises rocks.
He too concludes that all is well. This universe henceforth without a master seems
to him neither sterile nor futile. Each atom of that stone, each mineral flake of that
night filled mountain, in itself forms a world. The struggle itself toward the
heights is enough to fill a man's heart. One must imagine Sisyphus happy” (Myth
of Sisyphus 24).
and rejection of objective meaning, it is unsurprising that many scholars have mistakenly
their similarities in subject, the two remained close companions for almost a decade after
meeting in 1943, parting after bitter falling out in 1952 over a multitude of
(Camus’ rejection of Simone de Beauvoir’s advances, which offended Sartre, her long-
time paramour), and some literary (Les Temps Modernes’ scathing review of Camus’
"Nietzsche and Nihilism") (Bakewell; Aronson). However, even before their public
quarrel, the two men diverged in ways that make some of their philosophical ideals
Like Sartre and Kierkegaard, Camus anchors many of his conclusions in the
assertion that man experiences freedom of action. However, he avoids a hard estimation
about whether this state is a priori, stating bluntly, “Knowing whether or not man is free
doesn’t interest me” (Myth of Sisyphus 19). This declaration was unfavorable to Sartre,
who believed that an a priori position on freedom of the will was required in order for
any ideas about man’s experience of freedom to carry any weight; otherwise, those ideas
lacked any framework for understanding. In his review, Sartre makes a particularly
cutting comment to this end, stating, “Camus shows off a bit by quoting passages from
Jaspers, Heidegger, and Kierkegaard, whom, by the way, he does not always seem to
have quite understood” (An Explication 109). The acerbity of that particular remark
would sit poorly with Camus, to the extent that he would complain about the critique in a
letter to his former professor of philosophy, Jean Grenier: “…in criticism this is the rule
of the game, which is fine because on several points he enlightened me about what I
wanted to do. I also see that most of his criticisms are fair, but why that acid tone?” (qtd.
in Aronson 150)
Moreover, while Sartre’s conception of free will rejected objective meaning, it did
individuals define themselves, and all of humanity, through every choice, “there is not a
single one of our actions that does not at the same time create an image of man as we
think he ought to be. Choosing this or that is to affirm at the same time the value of what
we choose, because we can never choose evil” (Existentialism is a Humanism 24). This
thereby instills each action with meaning; each action’s meaning defines what the
his notebooks, he would declare himself “against the literature of commitment” (qtd. in
Aronson 83). Though he would later develop and expound on his belief in a “common
good” in his 1951 essay, The Rebel, his Sisyphian conception of the absurd in 1942
would hinge on his declaration that “belief in the meaning of life always implies a scale
of values, a choice, our preferences. Belief in the absurd, according to our definitions,
teaches the contrary” (21). Camus’ concept of the absurd leaves open the possibility of a
loss of moral value. Humans can describe events in their lives in terms of emotions, but,
interchangeable. As such, the life of commitment may cause a narrowing in focus that
prevents one from fully experiencing each moment and rejects the absurd; such behavior
wishes for a world on one’s own terms, rather than the reality of the world one is given.
In his review of The Stranger, Sartre would describe Camus’ position as: “Since
God does not exist and man dies, everything is permissible. One experience is as good as
another; the important thing is simply to acquire as many as possible. The ideal of the
absurd man is the present and the succession of present moments before an ever-
conscious spirit…For this man, everything is lawful” (An Explication 111). He would
critique this notion further, stating that Camus was “slyly filtering out all the meaningful
connections which are also part of the experience” (qtd. in Bakewell 152).
Throughout his life, Camus would insist that his interest in defining the absurd
was less to create a philosophical maxim and more to describe an experience, which he
expressed as preferable for his purposes: “The fact that certain great novelists have
chosen to write in terms of images rather than of arguments reveals a great deal about a
certain kind of thinking common to them all, a conviction of the futility of all explanatory
111 - 112). As such, it is only fitting that many of his philosophical contributions would
Albert Camus had a lifelong fondness for the theatre. When asked about this in a
television interview, he replied quite simply that he “was happy there” (Rhein 42). In
1935, prior to his own career as a playwright, he was the founder of, and an active troupe
member in, the Algerian Théâtre du Travail, where he gained experience both on stage
and behind the scenes. This experience would later serve as an icebreaker for his
Sartre’s No Exit. Performance, however, was not Camus’ greatest strength; he would
bow out of the production when Sartre’s financial backer fell through, citing the need for
the production to appear more professional (Aronson 10). In following years, he would
Consistently, he “uses the theater as a medium for serious statements about human life”
(Rhein 42). Like his essays, each play contains elements from his philosophy of
absurdism and revolt, realized on stage in concrete situations. Much like Beauvoir’s
assertions about existential theatre, Sartre would say of Camus’ theatre and literature that
“the absurd man does not explain; he describes” (An Explication 111)
At the time of his performances, Camus’ absurd man was in good theatrical
company. This theme of absurdity, and its resulting conclusions of angst, revolt, and
freedom, would appear in more contemporary theatrical works than just his own.
According to film critic Henry A. Giroux, art of a given era “does more than entertain; it
incorporates ideologies that represent the outcome of struggles marked by the historical
realities of power and the deep anxieties of the times” (Giroux 585). In the mid-20th
century, beginning towards the end of World War II, the Parisian theatre scene began to
populate with works that featured a common theme: man’s experience in the face of an
absurdist world. Many of the productions during this period also sported a new avant-
garde style: minimalist sets, scripts that deviate from the structure of the Aristotelian
“well made play,” and highly physical movements, bordering on violence. This
proliferation of abstract, philosophical, and highly stylized plays would later be termed
“The Theatre of the Absurd” by dramatist Martin Esslin, a term which would solidify in
theatrical history. Esslin clarifies that the playwrights in this school were likely not
aiming to conform to a similar pattern, but, rather, “to express no more and no less than
Multiple theories exist as to why this theme and style would have proliferated in
the theatre of post-war Paris specifically, though none are conclusive. Esslin hypothesizes
that it may be the result of the city’s “highly intelligent theatre-going public, which is
receptive, thoughtful, and as able as it is eager to absorb new ideas” (27), as well as a
national shattering of the world’s faith in “progress, nationalism, and various totalitarian
fallacies” (23). Many theatrical historians, including Esslin, William R. Mueller, and
Josephine Jacobson, credit Camus with merely with “diagnosing the human situation in a
Though few scholars have devoted time to their juxtaposition, the contemporary
who expressed the most similar themes in his theatrical work was not Jean-Paul Sartre,
but one of the defining playwrights of this new theatrical movement: Romanian-born
playwright Eugène Ionesco. Not only did the two share an assortment of biographical
similarities (both immigrants to Paris, both staunch supporters of nonviolence), but the
subjects of their works overlapped significantly. Not only did both feature commentary
on the absurd, but they did so using strikingly similar metaphors: a monarch confronted
with his own mortality (Caligula, Exit the King) and a biological affliction that threatens
content, the two playwrights diverge significantly on theatrical convention and style,
resulting in significantly different outcomes for the audience. As a result, the stage
Chapter 3
Of all of Camus’ plays, his earliest, Caligula, most closely mirrors his absurdist
philosophy. Drama critic Robert Kemp, who reviewed the original production of Camus’
Caligula, attested to the connection between Camus’ philosophy and the play in his
review, stating, “When I listen to Caligula, I can’t stop thinking about Albert Camus… I
never wonder: What is Caligula going to do? What are Cherea and Scipio thinking of? –
but: what does M. Camus want to say?” (qtd in Sonnenfeld 111) The play was written in
1938, though it was not staged publicly for another seven years, making both versions
relatively contemporaneous with The Myth of Sisyphus and his novel The Stranger, both
of which were published in 1942. Though separate forms (play, essay, and novel) Camus
considered these works to be companion pieces and would refer to them collectively as
his “three absurds” because they shared a common theme of “the meaninglessness or
In 1957, in the preface to a collection of his original plays, Camus admitted that
the inspiration for the trilogy came from “concerns that were [his] at that moment,” so
much so that he had originally conceived taking on the role of the titular character when
he first wrote the piece. Fortunately for the theatrical world, much like his departure
from No Exit, Camus reveals that the postponed production was a blessing and that the
war “forced modesty on [him],” and he allowed the role to go to a more experienced
actor when it was finally staged at the Théâtre Hébertot in 1945. (“Author’s Preface” v)
rule, one that gained historical notoriety for his scandalous and possibly mad public
behavior. For inspiration, Camus pulled from the accounts of Roman historian and
imperial secretary Suetonius. In his histories, Suetonius notes that, during his reign,
murdering citizens for sport, philandering with his patricians’ wives, and ordering his
army to collect all of the sea shells on the beaches of Brittania (Woods 47). Camus’ play
takes these accounts and frames them within the context of the playwright’s own
follows a similar method employed by his contemporary, Sartre. In his first play (Les
Mouches, or The Flies), also first conceived in 1938, Sartre too selected a classic work,
the Oresteia, whose plotline would be familiar to his contemporary audience, and used
the play’s dialogue to morph it into a vehicle for his existential philosophy (Gilbert 112).
On his own work, Sartre would write, “If it's true that man is free in a given situation and
that in and through that situation he chooses what he will be, then what we have to show
in the theater are simple and human situations and free individuals in these situations
choosing what they will be…” (Sartre on Theater 4-5). Through watching the actions of
Sartre’s Orestes, whom he stages as his existential hero, audience members gain insight
into which actions and motivations Sartre deems philosophically valuable. Based on the
success or failure, the audience will come away with an instruction manual for how to
approach their own lives. In his commentary on theatre, Sartre would write, “. . the most
moving thing that the theatre can show is a character in the process of being formed - the
moment of choice, of free decision that engages a morality and a whole life” (qtd. in
Gillespie 52).
Scholar Phillip Rhein finds a similar vein in Camus, stating, “Camus uses the
theater as a medium for serious statements about human life” (42). Camus’ didacticism,
though, takes on a different flavor than Sartre’s. While Sartre’s Orestes concludes his
story alive and affirming his freedom, most of Camus’ protagonists fail to survive the
events of the play, leading the audience to learn through their failure, rather than their
perishes.
In the play, Caligula’s descent into depravity is prefaced by the death of his sister
Druscilla, with whom he had an intimate, possibly sexual, relationship. The loss has left
Caligula noticeably changed, and, in the opening scene, several of the Roman patricians
THE OLD PATRICIAN: “When I saw him leaving the palace, I noticed a queer
FIRST PATRICIAN: “Yes, so did I. In fact, I asked him what was amiss.”
Though the patricians brush off the verbiage of this exchange as an attempt to
dismiss their concerns, the word “nothing” in this context carries more sinister overtones.
Caligula’s response is indicative of his descent into the darker elements of the absurd.
The reality of Druscilla’s death has served as a catalyst to drive Caligula to the edge of
nihilism. Scipio, a poet of the court, describes his interactions with Druscilla’s corpse in
a way that suggests that Caligula has undergone a mental transformation: “He went up to
Druscilla’s body. He stroked it with two fingers and seemed lost in thought for a long
while. Then, he swung around and walked out, calmly enough…” (Caligula 5).
When Caligula finally emerges from his solitude and enters into the palace
gardens, his colleagues report that they find him noticeably changed, physically and
psychologically. The stage directions describes him as having “legs caked with mud; his
garments dirty; his hair is wet, his look distraught” (Caligula 7). When his companion
Helicon inquires as to what he has been doing, Caligula explains that he has been
searching for a way to obtain the moon. Quickly, though, he asserts that the moon is
merely a symbol for something he cannot quite attain, equal to “happiness or eternal life -
- something, in fact that may sound crazy, but which isn’t of this world” (Caligula 8).
Here, he is faced with the same situation as Camus’ other existential protagonists:
the absurdity of man’s existence in the face of death. He searches for the moon, an object
so large and distant that he will never be able to attain it; the desire itself is absurd. When
Helicon questions him on this and whether it relates to his sister’s death, Caligula denies
that his thoughts come from grief. Rather, the death was “no more than a symbol of truth
that makes the moon essential to me” (8). The death itself is not the problem; it is merely
a reminder of a larger issue: that the world will fail to give him anything of objective,
permanent value. With the world rendered unsatisfactory, Caligula resolves use his
power as the emperor to shape a world of his choosing: “I shall make this age of ours a
kingly gift – the gift of equality” (17). With objective value negated, he will aim to pull
Throughout the play, Caligula engages in cold logical proofs, in which he takes a
premise that he accepts as true and follows it to its logical, and often horrifying,
conclusions. For example, in speaking with his intendant about the value of the treasury,
“If the Treasury has paramount importance, human life has none. That should be
obvious to you. People who think like you are bound to admit the logic of my
edict, and since money is the only thing that counts, should set no value on their
Though the intendant indicates the he considers his masters’ conclusions cruel, he
the premise that the Treasury has paramount importance is correct, then it cogently
follows that all other aspects of the world are worth less. “I have resolved to be logical,”
Caligula proclaims, “and I have the power to enforce my will. Presently you’ll see what
logic is going to cost you? I shall eliminate contradictions and contradicters” (13).
The theme of cold logic pervades much of this play and echoes a similar style to
Camus’ Sisyphus. Those familiar with both texts may note that the progression of
psychology that an ‘objective’ mind can always introduce into all problems have no place
in this pursuit and this passion. It calls simply for an unjust — in other words, logical —
thought” (Myth of Sisyphus 3). Just as Camus approaches the value of suicide clinically
and dismisses any arguments beyond what he can rationalize within his immediate
circumstances, so too does Caligula. He refuses any sentimental arguments about why he
should prioritize anything his life – his subjects, his resources, his lover – over anything
else. He aims for equality, which, in his case, means an equal chance at disposal.
Camus peppers the play’s dialogue with these proofs. One example of this comes
he is one of Caligula’s subjects. Now all men are Caligula’s subjects. Ergo, all
men are guilty and shall die. It is only a matter of time and patience.” (29)
Caligula aims to establish logic as a basis for absurdity. With each proof, he reaffirms his
belief in the absurdity of existence and provides a foundation for its corollary conclusion:
if life is absurd and without meaning, his own actions, just or cruel, bear little weight.
Caligula does not merely proclaim nihilism and absurdity in the face of death; he
lives it. He engages in acts that, to the average person, would be considered both cruel
and bizarre, such as closing public granaries with the intent of starving his people for his
own amusement, declaring, “Famine begins tomorrow” (28). Through his logic,
Another of his civic acts of whimsy is to declare that he will be promoting a “new
order of merit” and confer a badge of honor on any citizens who “have patronized
Caligula’s National Brothel most assiduously” (30). He adds, though, that anyone who
fails to obtain the badge within a twelve-month period will be “exiled or executed.” His
patricians are confused as to the “or” in his declaration, as the options are not equivocal.
To this, his lover, Caesonia, replies, “Because Caligula says it doesn’t matter which – but
it’s important he should have the right of choosing” (30). Here, Camus establishes
Caligula’s life of extreme freedom: one in which the choices themselves do not matter to
This disregard for human life extends beyond his citizens to even to his closest
companions. Logically, there is no reason to prioritize a colleague over any other citizen.
At the beginning of Act II, he sits down to dine with his patricians, displaying noticeably
bad table manners: flicking olive pits into neighboring dishes and picking his teeth with
his nails. Decorum too seems useless in a meaningless world. He turns to Lepidus, one
of his patricians, and says, “You’re looking grumpy, Lepidus. I wonder, can it be
because I had your son killed?” (24-25). In the same meal, he declares that Rufius, one
his former attendants, will soon be put to death. When the declaration is met with
silence, he asks “What’s this? None of you asks me why I’ve sentenced him to
death?...Good for you! I see you’re growing quite intelligent… It dawns on you that a
man needn’t have done anything for him to die” (Caligula 24). In his full embracement
notable that none of the other characters can refute him. In Act II, Cherea concedes that
“unfortunately for us – it’s a philosophy that’s logical from start to finish” (21); they are
thus unable to dissuade him through logical means. This is reminiscent of Camus’ own
meaning onto man’s existence. One may recall his critique of Kierkegaard’s argument
that absurdity was a sign that humanity should undergo “the sacrifice of the intellect” and
take a leap of faith that paradoxes such as this could only be understood in the eyes of
God. Camus rejected that philosophy, stating that Kierkegaard merely “wants to be
cured” of the absurdity, so he invented a reason that satisfied his desire for eternity. Just
as Kierkegaard cannot offer Camus a value system that is within the “limits of reason,”
neither can Caligula’s attendants. As such, their pleas for Caligula’s cessation are
quickly dismissed:
SCIPIO: Have you nothing of the kind in your life, no refuge, no mood that
Much like Camus, Caligula wishes to see his philosophy realized without
This is seen in Act IV, in which he offers a competition to local poets to expound on the
truth of a topic he provides: “Subject: Death. Time limit: one minute” (Caligula 64).
When the poets inquire as to who comprise the judging panel, he merely replies, “I. Isn’t
that enough?” (64). The poets are given the opportunity to then read their finished work
aloud, but, if he finds their position to be without substance, Caligula reserves the right to
interrupt them with a discharge from his anachronous coach’s whistle. Though each man
attempts in vain to read, none of them are able to say more than eight words before facing
a shrill blast and a rejection. Notably, none of these poets is able to convey anything
substantive in their early phrases: “Come to me Death, beloved…,” “Oh long, abstruse
orison…,” “Come to me, death beloved: (64-66). There is no way of knowing what sort
of explanations they will offer, but Caligula is already dissatisfied. Clearly, there is
something about trying to elucidate the nature of “death,” despite the prompt, that he
which, unlike his flippant dismissal of the others, Caligula directly ridicules: “Stop that!
What earthly connection has a blockhead’s happy infancy with the theme I set? The
connection! Tell me the connection!” (65) When the poet cannot, Caligula dismisses him
with the rest. From this, one can infer that this response was potentially closer than the
others to the emperor’s aims, as it was not rejected outright, but the poet was unable to
The only poet Caligula allows to recite his poem to completion is Scipio, whose
take on the topic is noticeably different than the others. Rather than emphasize death
This is only sentiment that Caligula deems acceptable, stating, “You’re very
young to understand so well the lessons we can learn from death” (66). This sentiment
most closely echoes Camus’. This short poem emphasizes themes that are also explored
in Camus’ journals and Sisyphus: the joys of sensory experience, particularly in nature,
and the fact that they temporary and lead nowhere (“frenzy without hope”). Like Camus
himself, these are the only truths that Caligula will deem acceptable. Scipio is excluded
from the fate of the rest of the poets, who are dismissed from the throne room and
commanded to “lick [their] tablets so as to efface the atrocities [they] scrawled upon
them” (67).
As seen from each of these examples, the primary method through which Camus
conveys the absurd is dialogue. The audience does not see the citizens plunged into
famine; they only hear tell of it. They do not see Druscilla’s body; Scipio and Cherea
merely describe it. They do not witness Lepidus’s son’s execution or even the
declaration that he will be put to death; it happened both in the past and off stage. With
the notable exception of one scene in Act IV, in which Caligula dons a tutu and matching
flower crown and proceeds to perform “some grotesque dance movements” (59), most of
the absurd elements of the play are verbal. As aptly described by theatrical critic Arthur
Sonnenfeld, “As so often happens when the action is unsuitable for stage representation,
This may be excusable in the case of public execution; realistic beheadings are
other cases, Camus seems to lean heavily into dialogue in areas where stage directions
may be more appropriate. For example, in the scene where Caligula is taunting Lepidus
with the death of his son, Camus does not write in any stage directions that would allow
the actors to physically convey their respective feelings on the execution: Lepidus’s
discomfort and Caligula’s joy at seeing him that way. It would be easy to write in a
grimace or to have Caligula laugh, but, instead, Camus opts to have Caligula verbally
deliver how the audience should interpret this situation: “Your face is sad” (25).
Sonnefeld believes that reliance on dialogue may contribute to what he calls Camus’
“failure as a dramatist” (123). He writes, “We are too far removed from prosaic reality
here to acknowledge the veracity of Caligula’s, and Camus’, discovery that our lives are
governed by sham and pretense” (112). This stylistic choice creates a distancing effect.
Rather than physically observing and becoming a part of the action, the audience is
experience the absurd, they do allow for audience members to logically entertain it.
Sonnenfeld writes, “In his plays, Camus simply forces his theories into his character’s
speeches…” (115-116). Many of the scenes in which the patricians confront or challenge
employed by the classic philosopher Plato. In each of his dialogues, Plato presents his
fictionalized version of his mentor, Socrates, and another party. For example, in Plato’s
Euthyphro, Socrates and the titular character discuss the nature of piety:
SOCRATES: …But just at present I would rather hear from you a more precise
answer, which you have not as yet given, my friend, to the question, What is
‘piety’? When asked, you only replied, Doing as you do, charging your father
with murder.
SOCRATES: No doubt, Euthyphro; but you would admit that there are many
SOCRATES: Remember that I did not ask you to give me two or three examples
of piety, but to explain the general idea which makes all pious things to be pious.
(Euthyphro 16)
As seen here, the nature of the dialogue allows each participant to present their ideas on a
given topic and challenge one another’s thinking. Here, Socrates points out that
Euthyphro’s assertions about piety are flawed by pointing out that he has listed examples
rather than creating a holistic definition for the term. The criticism allows for Euthyphro,
and readers, to amend their definitions. Platonic scholar Rebecca Bensen Cain writes,
“The elenchus is identified with a logical device Socrates uses for refuting the
interlocutor by testing his alleged knowledge, or a set of beliefs, for consistency. The
interlocutor puts forward a thesis that he thinks is true. By means of a series of questions
and answers, Socrates is able to draw the opposite conclusion from the interlocutor’s
thesis from premises that the interlocutor accepts” (Bensen Cain 6). Thus, in this
example, Plato’s ideals appear superior to Euthyphro’s based on their ability to resist
criticism. This approach is rhetorically strong, as the readers are able to reject the claims
along with the characters, leading them to the same conclusions as the author.
emperor’s encounters with his patricians take a dialectic form, with Caligula arguing in
favor of nihilism and the other in favor of a specific value. For example, towards the end
of the play, he engages in dialogue with Caesonia, who argues that her love for him and
the tenderness that they shared is, unlike all else he has discarded, worth preserving:
CALIGULA: I don’t know. All I know – and it’s the most terrible thing of all – is
that this shameful tenderness is one sincere emotion that my life has given up to
CAESONIA: That has no importance. All I know is: I’m happy. What you’ve
just said has made me very happy. But why can’t I share my happiness with you?
CALIGULA: Then there must be two kinds of happiness. I have chosen the
Here, Caesonia is unable to convince Caligula logically that their affair should carry any
objective value; her criticism that he cannot be happy because happiness is a kind
emotion is rejected on the basis that Caligula continues to feel happy in destruction. As
such, because of his dedication to logic, he determines that there is no objective reason
she should be immune to his murderous rampage, and he strangles her with his bare
hands: “Happiness it is, Caesonia. I know what I’m saying” (71). Even this act of
killing her, “the ruthless logic that crushes out human lives” (72). So, while the audience
may, as Sonnenfeld points out, remain emotionally distant from the actual action, the
physically over his opposition, Caligula has won the debate. There is no logical position
“the most human and most tragic of errors” (“Author’s Preface” v). He writes, “…if his
truth is to rebel against fate, his error lies in negating what binds him to mankind. One
cannot destroy everything without destroying oneself” (“Author’s Preface” v). Caligula
may not be objectively wrong, but he has isolated himself from his humanity and found
the path of nihilism empty. This is much like Camus’ conclusions on suicide: that it
merely rushes the inevitable and fails to appreciate the sensory experiences of the present
moment. Thus, Caligula’s reign of terror must also come to an end. In the final scene, he
laments, “I have chosen the wrong path: the path that leads to nothing” (Caligula 73).
Upon this declaration, he is swarmed by his conspirators and stabbed in the face by
Camus’ commentary on his main character indicates that he considered the text to
be didactic. Caligula does not merely die in the text because the play is a tragedy; rather,
his death carries with it a moral truth. According to Sonnenfeld, “Camus’ attitude toward
Caligula is ambivalent. While he admires the Emperor for having reached that level of
awareness which enables him to deny the gods (and, by gods, Camus means all abstract
belief from table manners to justice), he despises him for denying man. The audience is
supposed to share this attitude” (112). Camus describes Caligula’s fall as necessary in
order to illustrate the “havoc” this attitude wreaks upon man, thus “bringing out its failure
However, by minimizing stage directions and the set, the effect is cerebral, rather than
“If Camus argued that in our disillusioned age the world had ceased to make
phrasing and argumentative brilliance of both Sartre and Camus in their relentless
probing still, by implication, proclaim a tacit conviction that logical discourse can
However, Camus was not the only playwright during his time to expound on man facing
the absurd. This theme would populate in many post-war theatrical productions. Martin
Esslin conceptually links Camus with these writers based on “a similar sense of the
senselessness of life, of the inevitable devaluation of ideals, purity, and purpose” (24).
One of the more notable parallels would come in the works of Eugène Ionesco,
who, in 1962, also penned a play about an aging monarch facing the reality of absurd
demise. However, based on the stylistic differences in terms of dialogue structure, set
design, and stage directions, his production would take on a different rhetorical function
than Camus’.
Chapter 4
Few playwrights are plagued by fear of death in quite the same way as Eugène
Ionesco: “I have always been obsessed by death. Since the age of four…this anguish has
never left me” (qtd in Dobrez 168). This obsession brought about behavior that might, in
modern terms, been considered obsessive compulsive: “As I finally understood it, people
died because they’d been ill, because they’d had an accident – and if you took great care
not to be ill, if you were very good, if you always wore your muffler and took your
medicine, if you looked both ways before you crossed the street then you wouldn’t ever
have to die” (Bonnefory 11). Eventually, the young Ionesco would question aging and, if
his hypothesis about death held true, exactly how old one could expect to become if they
In an interview with Claude Bonnefoy, he recalled clearly his first realization that
this theory was flawed: “One day, I asked my mother. ‘We’re all going to die, aren’t we?
Tell me the truth.’ She said, ‘Yes.’ I must have been four years old, maybe five…I was
very frightened. I kept thinking she was going to die one day. And I couldn’t stop
thinking about it…” (Bonnefoy 12). The reality of his own mortality would continue to
plague him throughout this life and show up in many of his fictional works. As such,
because of their mutual meditations on life in the face of death, Ionesco and Camus share
Ionesco uses the absurd reality of facing death as the subject of many of his plays,
though perhaps most notably in 1962’s Exit the King. The text was written over the
course of 20 days, during which Ionesco was on bed rest while recovering from a serious
illness. “I had been ill,” he relayed, “and I’d been very scared” (Bonnefoy 78). He
relayed that the illness merely expedited an idea that he had long been planning to flesh
The plot centers on the character of King Bérenger. Those familiar with
Ionesco’s other theatrical works will note that this is the third of four plays in the
Bérenger cycle, the others being The Killer (1958), Rhinoceros (1959), and A Stroll in the
Air (1963). Although each of these plays feature a main character with the name of
average citizen. In Rhinoceros, he is an alcoholic who lacks motivation, whereas Exit the
In this case, the choice is especially appropriate; the play itself echoes themes present in
the 15th century morality play of the same name. In Everyman, the titular character is
told that, at his death, he will face the judgment of God and be assessed based on his
actions on earth. As the story progresses, Everyman journeys onward and tries to
convince several characters to join with him and accompany him on to death, including
Good Deeds, Beauty, Strength, and Knowledge. Unfortunately, when faced with his own
mortality, most of them must abandon him and can no longer accompany him on to
death. Only Good Deeds remains. The resolution of this play is often used to teach
Christian values: that only one’s good actions will accompany one to the afterlife. (Ward)
While parallels can be drawn between these two plays, Ionesco himself
message to the world, to wish to direct its course, to save it, is the business of the
plays, in which he can offer only a testimony, not a didactic message…” (qtd, in Esslin
129).
That is not to say that Ionesco believed that philosophy and theatre were
posing problems, rather than advocating for solutions. In an interview with Claude
ideology is a closed system, giving ‘clichéized’ explanations” (124). In this case, the use
who wield great earthly power. Thus, Ionesco can use him to explore the concept of
In the play, Bérenger’s kingdom is slowly declining. Not only is the country in
the midst of economic decline, but these conditions are also mirrored by the state of the
castle itself; when attempting to fix the radiator, the castle guard reveals, “I don't know,
this is just the time when it ought to be hot. Central heating, start up! Nothing doing, it's
not working. Central heating, start up! The radiator's stone cold” (Exit the King 8).
Nothing in the castle is working quite the way it used to years ago. Even the king’s two
wives, the stony Marguerite and the naïve Marie, find their clothing tattered, falling apart,
This use physical dilapidation in the costumes and scenery echoes that of the King
Bérenger himself. Unbeknownst to him, his wives have become privy with information
about his health from the local physician. The king’s time is up; he is to die by the
conclusion of the play. The reality of his death upsets Marie, the younger and more
optimistic of the wives. She pleads with Marguerite in hopes that she will not have to
reveal this truth to the king, wishing to spare him the knowledge of his own demise out of
a sense of pity for him. The more cynical and pragmatic Marguerite indicates that he
should confront his death directly rather than have it take him by surprise:
MARIE: “No, don’t tell him. It’s better if he doesn’t notice anything.”
MARGUERITE: “…and goes out like a light? That’s impossible.” (Exit the King
11)
limp, complaining of stiff legs and a strained back: “How do you feel? I feel awful! I
don't know quite what's wrong with me” (Exit the King 19). He blames conditions
beyond himself; perhaps his slippers are too tight, or perhaps it is lumbago. Bérenger
retains a state of blissful ignorance of his upcoming demise. Though his health is poor
and his kingdom decrepit, he remains ignorant that these signs point to his demise, a
situation that Marie tries to extend for as long as she can: “He feels quite well…Don't
you?” (Exit the King 24). Ultimately, Marguerite decides that she must tell him directly:
“Sire, we have to inform you that you are going to die” (Exit the King 21).
The news does not go over well. Bérenger remains in denial of his mortality and
pushes her warnings aside. Marguerite refuses to cave to his logic and reveals to him the
exact moment of his death: “You’re going to die in an hour and a half; you’re going to
die at the end of the show” (Ionesco 24). Still, he declares himself immortal due to his
position: “I'll die when I want to. I'm the king. I'm the one to decide” (Exit the King 25).
Throughout the remainder play, Bérenger proceeds through the shock and denial
of his own mortality, making similar observations to that of Camus in Sisyphus. Up until
this point, he recognized that death applied to him, but only in a theoretical sense. Now,
he is faced with the reality as an immediate one, which he had not anticipated. Bérenger
reveals that he expected to have more time: “I came into the world five minutes ago. I got
married three minutes ago” (Exit the King 45). The reality to him is absurd: that he will
have lived his life only to die and with the possibility of no longer being remembered. In
vain, he begs for some eternal mark so that his subjects will not forget him. Like Camus
in Sisyphus, he cannot reconcile that he has lived a long and full life, only for it to amount
to very little:
“When I've gone, when I've gone. They'll laugh and stuff themselves silly and
dance on my tomb. As if I'd never existed. Oh, please make them all remember
me! Make them weep and despair and perpetuate my memory in all their history
books. Make everyone learn my life by heart. Make them all live it again. Let the
schoolchildren and the scholars study nothing else but me, my kingdom and my
exploits. Let them burn all the other books, destroy all the statues and set mine up
office of every Town Hall, including Rates and Taxes, and in all the hospitals. Let
every car and pushcart, flying ship and steamplane be named after me. Make them
forget all other captains and kings, poets, tenors and philosophers, and fill every
conscious mind with memories of me. Let them learn to read by spelling out my
Like Camus, Ionesco also conveys the futility of meaning in the face of death through
dialogue, but his approach renders a different conclusion. During the play, Bérenger
pleads with the world to instill upon him some wisdom on how to die. He implores those
who came before him to teach him what they learned, “Tell me how you managed to
accept death and die. Then teach me!” (Ionesco 54). Though Marie, The Guard, the
Doctor, and Marguerite each pleads for the ghosts of the past to appear and teach the king
their preferred way to approach his mortality – serenity, indifference, resignation, and
reason -- he is not granted any assurance of which path is the best one. The stage remains
uses verbal exchanges in order to establish the logical value of certain approaches to life.
Based on which idea triumphs through elenchus, the audience can determine which of the
two is superior. Conversely, none of the exchanges in Exit the King end with a clear,
discernable victor. Bérenger presents the question, but he receives no answer in return.
As such, Ionesco’s play avoids becoming the type of didactic theatre that he dislikes.
Many of the elements that Ionesco incorporates in the play, including dialogue,
physical comedy, and set design are nonsensical and extreme, which help to emphasize
the absurdity of human death. For example, Marguerite reveals that Bérenger’s age is
beyond that of a normal human being: “At fifty, you wanted first to reach your sixties.
And so you went on, from sixty to ninety to a hundred and twenty-five to two hundred,
until you were four hundred years old” (38). Though no real human could reach the age
of 400, the effect of such a hyperbole in the play emphasizes the feeling of how quickly
the years pass and age accrues. Ionesco is able to create an accurate feeling for the
audience of large amounts of time slipping by quickly without relying on the number
being realistic. It also adds to the absurdity of the play; it thwarts logic in the same way
that Camus’ sword and machine gun example does: by presenting a situation that is true
cling to life. When he is not pleading for guidance, Bérenger is actively putting up a
fight to retain a hold on his kingdom, clinging even symbolic representations of his rule.
When the maid Juliette approaches to swap his crown with a nightcap, he actively
refuses: “I won’t wear that!” Juliette tries to placate him, “It’s a sort of crown, but not so
heavy” (Exit the King 43). In trying to convince the Doctor that his medical
examinations are flawed, he demands “a fanfare” as evidence that his time has not yet
come, as though this auditory symbol of his position will act as some sort of buffer from
death (Exit the King 58). None of these items, even when can attain them, pushes his
death any further into the future, and his reign, no matter how he clings to it, will come to
an end.
Interestingly, of the many things symbols of worldly power used in the text, one
of the king’s demands could potentially be a direct send-up to Camus. Remarking on the
“When kings die, they clutch at the walls, the trees, the fountains, the moon” (Exit the
King 79). The decision to conclude that line with “the moon,” of all objects, could be
coincidental, but it does harken back to Camus’ absurdist protagonist, who demands the
same object when confronting his demise: “All I want, Helicon, is -- the moon” (Caligula
46)
One of the most memorable of the king’s vain attempts to retain his rule comes in
the form of a physical comedy scene in which the court tries to revitalize King Bérenger
for a royal procession by screaming out the phrase, “Long live the king!” Each time that
the phrase is shouted, Bérenger is able to scramble to his feet, but, once silence falls
again, he collapses onto his face. They continue to chant, and he continues to pull
himself up and then immediately fold. This cycle of the physical comedy, of rising and
falling, creates a humorous scene for audience members that they can ultimately read as
fruitless vanity. No matter how many times the court shouts “Long live the king!,” it
only has a temporary effect. When he realizes that he is unable to sustain his pace, he
MARIE (to the KING, who is trying to totter up the steps of his throne): Don't let
go, hang on! (To JULIETTE, who is trying to help the KING:) Leave him alone!
He can do it alone!
The KING fails to climb the steps of the throne. (Exit the King 59)
The stage directions in this scene further physicalize the feelings of futility. By
thwart death are visual and direct. Intellectually understanding a state of futility is
different than seeing it directly. Through this method, the audience can watch and
experience his desperation, thereby capturing the emotional truth more fully than if it
were recreated purely in dialogue, which would render the futility only theoretical.
Exit the King is inherently a highly active, physical play. Camus writes in little in the
way of stage directions, but Ionesco uses them in abundance. Throughout the play, actors
are leaping, collapsing, sleepwalking, and even disappearing. In a review of the 2007
Australian production starring Geoffrey Rush, whose success would land him the same
role in the 2009 Broadway production, The Age reporter and drama critic Cameron
Woodhead wrote, “Exit The King is a hugely demanding play. It requires comic mastery -
there are slapstick near-death experiences and visual gags aplenty” (Woodhead). In fact,
when Rush accepted the role, he was struck by what he called “the play’s brazen
theatricality— it was like Ionesco was throwing great gobs of phosphorus and paint at the
canvas…” (Healy). This action, though demanding for performers, allows the play to
become less didactic and more experiential. Esslin writes, “The Theatre of the Absurd
has renounced arguing about the absurdity of the human condition; it merely presents it
Ionesco also captures this emotional, rather than physical, reality through careful
set design. Whereas Caligula is anchored in concrete, specific locations (a state room in
the imperial palace, a proscenium stage, the palace gardens), the setting of Exit the King
is much less determinate. Readers know that the entirety of the action takes place in “the
throne room, vaguely dilapidated, vaguely Gothic,” but the set is largely devoid of
realistic furnishings. Ionesco does indicate that his set requires two doors, three thrones,
and a stained glass window, but he provides no other pieces of furniture in his
descriptions. This minimalism creates a greater distance from life by dislodging it from
physical reality. Esslin describes this as “the striving for integration between the subject-
matter and form” (25). Whereas Camus’ Caligula offers realistic settings and situations,
Exit the King aims for thematic, rather than literal, truth. The decision sacrifices reality
for a stronger representation of the “feeling” of the absurd in the face of death.
At the play’s conclusion, these set pieces, and Bérenger with them, literally
dissolve in front of the audience’s eyes. The stage direction reads: “This disappearance
of the windows, the doors and the walls, the KING and the throne must be very marked,
but happen slowly and gradually. The KING sitting on his throne should remain visible
for a short time before fading into a kind of mist” (Ionesco 95). Critic Paul Vernois
comments on Ionesco’s stylistic choices, emphasizing that “without a doubt, the kingdom
shrinks from day to day like the king’s intimate entourage, but there is something more
serious: the domain which feels the senses of dying shrinks also” (qtd. in Tener 185).
Thus, audience members are left with the experience of facing one’s death without any
conclusive advice on how to handle their own. This most readily suits Ionesco’s
preferences, for, in his own words, “I believe that, as Nabokov said, an author should not
a 2009 interview with the New York Times, Rush expressed, “When I’m performing the
play, I think there’s 1,000 people out there who are collectively enjoying the boisterous
burlesque of this charade. But I bet there are also 1,000 absolutely distinct human beings
having a very private discourse with themselves, thinking, ‘I wonder how I’m going to be
Thus, in Exit the King, Ionesco also is able to translate the sort of absurdity in the
face of death that Camus describes from a logical exercise into a theatrical impression,
Chapter 5
Camus would never abandon his absurdist philosophy. Yet, post-World War II, it
would undergo major development in the face of political crisis. As France recovered
from the horrors of Nazi occupation, public attention turned to reparation, and individuals
were forced to confront the atrocities of a war that had left the European homefront in
shambles. Moreover, the world was forced to reckon with the abasement of human
morality brought on by the devastation of the Holocaust and the development of the atom
bomb. According to Bakewell, these circumstances “made people realize that they and
their fellow humans were capable of departing entirely from civilized norms; no wonder
the idea of fixed human nature seemed questionable. Whatever new world was going to
arise out of the old one, it would probably need to be built without reliable guidance from
sources of authority such as politicians, religious leaders, and even philosophers…” (At
the Existentialist Café, 10). World War II had served as a concrete reminder that none of
According to Rhein, “Through his reflections on the absurd, Camus could say in
1943 that the only serious philosophical problem was the one of suicide; but confronted
with the Hitler terror, the occupation, resistance, and final liberation of France, the
Communist successes in France, and the events of the Cold War, he soon discovered that
the stoic comfort offered by Sisyphus was of little solace or value” (80). Absurdism
affirms that humanity is not bound to a single, superior outcome and advises us to, like
Sisyphus, find joy in the ability to experience the world. Yet, few can “imagine Sisyphus
happy” for the experience of human atrocity. As such, many critics regard his next major
that suicide was untenable. From that singular observation, he develops guidance on how
Therefore, one should live and, like the mythic Sisyphus, find joy in persistence and the
ability to experience through sensory means. By this logic, in The Rebel, he concludes
that the absurd also renders violence, like suicide, unjustifiable. To decry suicide and
allow murder is nonsensical; if one is expected to “persist” subjectively, one should not
rob others of the same opportunity. Camus writes, “Absurdist reasoning cannot defend
the continued existence of its spokesman and, simultaneously, accept the sacrifice of
With that conclusion, it follows that repressive regimes like those seen in
perfection, a state Camus believes unattainable and in denial of human reality. Through
this, they deny humanity’s natural state and force it to conform to a value that, like the
Marxism as a major offender. He writes, “Since that value [of Marxism] is, at the same
time, foreign to ethics, it is not, properly speaking, a value on which one can base one’s
conduct; it is a dogma without foundation that can be adopted only as the desperate effort
going to be imposed by those whom dogma profits” (222). He believes that most
totalitarian regimes are subject to the same logic as Kierkegaard: wishing to impose a
value onto a structure in order to escape the absurd. In the name of this unknown value,
many regimes will justify actions that deny humanity – repression of speech, limitations
on resources, and physical abuse. To use a modern maxim, adherents rationalize this as
“the ends justify the means,” that the nobility of their goals grants them pardon for their
actions. To Camus, though, this justification is false; the possibility of future justification
Rhein, “…in the literature of revolt, man can no longer afford to be an indifferent
stranger. He lives in the same absurd world, bereft of all metaphysical aid; but rather
than being satisfied to describe that world, Camus now insists that man must fashion a
Camus expands his critique of totalitarianism and violence beyond the Nazism
that plagued France during the Occupation or Marxism; to him, all forms of violent
control were, by their nature, worth opposing. As such, he was equally critical of the
civilization has just reached its final degree of savagery” (“Albert Camus on
conflicts that put him at odds with Sartre, whose belief in the notion of “commitment”
leant itself to such idealistic purposes as a society aimed at reshaping man; Sartre’s post-
Though The Rebel would not be published in France until 1951, ghosts of similar
sentiments cropped up in some of Camus’ literary and theatrical works, most notably his
1947 novel, The Plague, and his 1948 play, State of Siege. Here again, Camus
stylistically dramatizes his theories of the absurd, and, once again, his predilection for
Chapter 6:
One of his lesser known compositions, State of Siege is a highly allegorical work
that focuses on a city where political control is seized by a dictatorial figure known as
The Plague. Readers familiar with Camus’ other works will draw a natural parallel to
the aforementioned novel. However, while a thematic connection exists, in that both deal
with rebellion in the face of forces trying to quell man’s freedom, Camus disavowed the
idea that the play was meant to be an adaptation of the novel; he insists that the
character’s name was purely “symbolic” in that “since he is a dictator, that appellation is
Camus chose to set the play in Spain, a decision that theatre critic Gabriel Marcel
criticized in his Nouvelles Littéraires review, claiming that a location in the Eastern-bloc
would have been more appropriate for the subject matter. He indicated that Camus
lacked the courage to directly call out Eastern European dictatorships. Camus found his
claim both insulting and inaccurate, and he chose to follow up on the critique in a letter
because “when you state that the setting shows a lack of courage and fairness, you are
asking for a reply” (73). This critique was later published as the essay “Why Spain?.” In
it, he noted that Marcel’s criticism implied that countries like Spain were immune to
“You write that, for the well-informed, Spain is not now the source of the news
most likely to spread despair among men who respect human dignity. You are not
general, in the name of Christ, raised up an army of Moors, hurled them against
the legally constituted government of the Spanish Republic, won victory for an
unjust cause after massacres that can never be expiated, and initiated a frightful
repression that has lasted ten years and is not yet over. Yes, indeed, why Spain?
Camus, who considered the Spanish Civil War a tragedy, accused Marcel of an
inclination to ignore the atrocities of any countries who aligned with him politically:
“…you are willing to keep silent about one reign of terror in order the better to combat
another one. There are some of us who do not want to keep silent about anything” (78).
government; the structure and infringement upon human liberty was pervasive in either.
Thus, he indicated that his goal in State of Siege was to denounce totalitarianism in all of
its forms: “I focused my play on what seems to me the only living religion in the century
State of Siege opens on the streets of a fortified Spanish city, Cadiz, where the
populace is engrossed in a rare visual spectacle: a comet trailing across the city skyline.
The citizens squabble over the meaning of the event. Some of them, like the governor,
believe the comet is purely a natural phenomenon, while others worry that it is an ill
omen, one that signifies “a sign of war” (138). Only one character is indifferent to the
foreboding: Nada, a crippled drunkard who proclaims his belief “in nothing in the world,
except wine” (141) He criticizes the rhythmic, predictable ways in which the other
townspeople live their lives, as though their routines will protect them from the
welcomes it, for “life and death are one, and man’s a faggot for the burning” (140). Nada
expresses his disdain for the citizens’ attempts to provoke meaning out of the comet,
proclaiming that “…nothing on this rotten earth of ours, no king, no comet, no moral
Nada’s proclamations on his indifference to the end of the world align themselves
philosophically with nihilism, the belief that there life is inherently meaningless. This is
reflected even in his name, “nada” being the Spanish word for “nothing.” As such,
readers can infer going forward that his fate in the text will align with Camus’ own
Through the inclusion of Nada in the prologue, Camus quickly establishes the
which individual characters will stand for philosophical approaches to the problem of the
play and their fates within it will determine which approach Camus finds preferable. He
himself admits the strategy, writing “…it is utterly useless to accuse my characters of
The character that challenges Nada’s nihilism in this scene is Diego, a young man
who is engaged to the judge’s daughter, Victoria. He criticizes Nada’s dismissal of all
value, stating, “No one is above honor,” and advises him, “Save up your scorn; some day
you’ll need it” (142). Diego dismisses Nada’s cynical prophecies on the grounds that he
has no time for them; he has devoted himself to his newfound happiness with his fiancée.
Here, by challenging Nada’s nihilism, Camus sets up the structure for elenchus.
Audience members can infer that, as with Camus’ previous uses of elenchus, Diego’s
belief in honor will at some point come up against Nada’s nihilism. Based on the results
In the first act, the town’s fears about the comet are realized; it signals the arrival
of a plague. Camus includes a “pantomime” in which “[o]ne of the actors on the raised
platform, while moving to the front and gesturing, staggers and topples over the edge
among the crowd, which surges in on the fallen body” (152). After the doctor examines
the corpse, a member of the crowd mimes demands for an explanation. The doctor
whispers one to him, and the man, “as if the word were too big to be got out,” shouts it to
the audience: “Plague!” (152). The scene quickly devolves as the crowd begins to panic.
Many of the theistic members of the community offer the crowd remedies from their
religious tradition – herbs (the sorceress), prayer (the priest), clairvoyance (the
astrologer) – but their efforts are in vain. More members begin to drop to the ground,
“writhe convulsively, move their arms feebly, and die” (154). The plague has taken
ahold of the city and, as the citizens quickly learn, in more ways than one.
The plague appears in the play not only as an affliction, but also as a character.
Accompanied by his Secretary, a woman who carries a notebook, he arrives on the scene
THE MAN: [still in a matter-of-fact voice] I am…the Plague – if you really must
know.
THE MAN: Yes, and I must ask you to hand over your post to me. I hate having
to rush you like this, please take my word for it; but I shall have a lot to do here.
Suppose I give you two hours to transfer your functions to me? Do you think that
When the governor refuses to relinquish control, the Plague points to some of his officers,
and the Secretary makes a motion in her notebook as though she is crossing out a word.
Each time, an officer falls dead. The Plague calmly asks the governor, “Have I made it
sufficiently clear that you’d do well to take me seriously?” (161 – 162). Daunted by the
Secretary’s supernatural abilities, the governor exchanges his life for his post, leaving the
The Plague begins to impose his will onto the populace with sweeping
declarations, providing strict order and bureaucracy. Many of his mandates are phrased
in such a way that they could arguably be considered in the population’s best interest.
These include decrees that all citizens keep pads of vinegar in their mouths because
“words are carriers of the infection” (169) and that all infected houses, for the sake of
public health, must be marked with “the plague sign – a black star with rays a foot long”
(166). The Plague’s town criers insist that obedience is of utmost importance and that
any lapses in duty will be “punished with the utmost rigor of the law” (166, 169). These
conditions – marking specific “contaminated” citizens with stars (similar to the Star of
Nazi regime, ones that would be easily recognizable in post-Occupation France. As such,
audience members can easily make an association between Plague and recent totalitarian
dictators, as well as the rhetoric that accompanied the regimes: the sacrifice of individual
freedoms for the sake of a nebulous public good. Hallmarks of life under the Nazi
regime in occupied France included “the steady erosion of the distinction between private
and public good” and “’common good’ over private” (Kobrak et al. 16).
The Plague’s new mandates do provide the city of Cadiz with order; every decree
comes with a new organizational structure to render all actions both predictable and
controllable, even death: “As from today you are going to learn to die in an orderly
manner. Until now you died in the Spanish manner, haphazard—when you felt like it, so
to say…But, happily for you, I shall impose order on all that. There will be no more
dying as the fancy takes you. Lists will be kept up—what admirable things lists are!—
and we shall fix the order of your going” (171-172). This too fits with the notion
common to totalitarian regimes that outside structures must be imposed in order to quell
disorder.
This new order comes at a significant cost: bureaucratic overreach. Most actions,
even trivial ones, under the Plague’s rule must be pre-approved and issued a government-
sanctioned certificate. Even the act of continuing to live requires citizens to apply for a
and unclear. For example, when a woman’s house is requisitioned, she is told that she
needs to submit an application for a new one, but that process also had pre-requisite
paperwork:
NADA: Yes, provided you claim priority and support your claim with the
necessary documents.
NADA: A duly authenticated certificate declaring that it’s a matter of urgency for
NADA: You will not be given accommodation because your children are
Camus uses these examples of public desperation in the face of the new system in such a
way that demonstrates the harsh limitations it places on individual behaviors. This
imposition on freedom is incompatible with his absurdism for the same reasons he
opposes church dogma. In The Rebel, he would later write, “The rebel undoubtedly
demands a certain degree of freedom for himself; but in no case, if he is consistent, does
he demand the right to destroy the existence and the freedom of others” (282).
The inclusion of Nada in the new bureaucracy also reinforces Camus’ absurdist
philosophy. In order for the Plague to impose his new systems, he enlists Nada as one of
his associates, tasking him with bureaucratic duties such as reviewing applications and
checking that citizens have proper credentials. Nada is all too happy to provide service;
the confusion and public frustration serve his own ends: “Down with everything!
Nobody knows what anybody means—the golden age has come” (186). In allowing
Nada to be complicit with the dictatorship, Camus is able to reinforce his notions about
the dangers of total nihilism, much in the way that he did in Caligula. Nada can provide
a warning about the dangers of purely nihilistic attitudes towards the absurd. According
to philosopher Michael Novak, “For Camus, nihilism was first of all a personal problem.
human life—if the universe—is empty of meaning, then how ought I to live? (Can
"ought" have any meaning?) Besides, if the universe lacks meaning, then aren't the Nazis
just as light as anybody else? Why shouldn't they do as they please, with whatever
violence it takes? If they could make Walpurgisnacht come to life, why not? If there is no
right and no wrong, then anything goes. Power rules. The thugs decide” (Novak x-xi).
The affiliation between the Secretary and the Plague contributes to the success of
the Plague’s endeavors. Mandates may be enforced because she carries the ultimate
punishment. By crossing off a name in her ledger, the offending party is immediately
struck dead. Though she is never named explicitly in the play, her descriptions lend
audience members to believe she is the incarnation of death. When the pair first arrives,
the Plague tells the governor, “As a matter of fact, you know her, though perhaps her sex
misleads you” (161), perhaps referencing that death is more typically personified as male
in allegorical literature. She herself makes references to the fact that “the perfect
secretary is sure that everything can always be put right; that there’s no muddle in the
accounts that can’t be straightened in time, and no missed appointment that can’t be made
again” (163). These may reference other popular manifestations of death as keeping
accounts of all living beings and squaring them away when their time is up.
Additionally, when Diego references a hundred years as a long span of time, she retorts,
“But I can take a broader view” (204), indicating that she is ancient and, possibly,
timeless. As such, part of facing this totalitarian regime will require citizens to face death
itself.
Unable to face death themselves, desperate citizens seek support from the existing
institutions – the courts and the church– and find these efforts fruitless. The judge offers
to turn in his own daughter to the authorities based on his responsibility to uphold the
law, and the priest, when a voice of one of his parishioners calls to him for sanctuary, is
given the stage direction to “quicken his steps” (169) to avoid interacting with them. As
such, Camus does not advocate that a solution can be found through either of these
existing structures. Though this would cause him some unfavorable press at the time,
specifically from the devoutly Catholic Marcel who took offense to the church’s
stating, “I did not seek to flatter anyone in writing The State of Siege” (qtd. in Rhein 69).
Soon, Diego arrives on the scene, clad in a Plague doctor’s uniform, and bemoans
the state of the city. He encourages the townsfolk, listed in the script as the Chorus, to
vocalize their dissatisfaction, but they express futility: “What is the use of crying out?
No longer have our woman the flowerlike faces that set our hearts aflame with desire, and
Spain is Spain no longer. Line up! Line up! Keep your places! No joy is left in life…”
(187). From this, Diego realizes that he must face the Plague without reinforcements:
“Then let’s have it out, you and I. The stronger of us two will kill the other” (187). The
Plague retaliates against his threat by sending his officers after Diego, marking him with
the black star and infecting him with the plague. Now, Diego’s fate is directly tied to the
populace. As such, as the only named character in the crowd, Diego’s choices may
From this, we can infer that abandonment is not within Camus’ list of acceptable
approaches to totalitarianism. Diego initially hopes to escape from Cadiz by boat, but the
boatman initially refuses him on the grounds that he may carry the plague and infect
other countries. When Diego tries to bribe him, the Secretary enters and refuses to let
him leave, professing that desertion is “a contingency that’s not provided for. Also, I
know you better, you won’t desert your post” (202). Instead, the two begin a verbal
sparring match. The secretary proclaims that Diego’s defiance of her will is ultimately
futile; she will find everyone eventually and cross their names off in her ledger: “Now
and then we overlook someone. But he always ends up by giving himself away, sooner
or later. When the man reaches the age of a hundred he can’t help bragging about it—
fool that he is! Then it gets into the newspapers. It’s only a question of time” (204).
Knowing that this is true, Diego concedes that he will be killed eventually, but notes that
and with a restful smell of ink. But a single man, that’s another story; he can
upset your applecart. He cries aloud his joys and griefs. And as long as I live I
shall go on shattering your beautiful new order with the cries that rise to my lips.
Yes, I resist you, I resist you with all the energy that’s in me” (205).
The Secretary begins to laugh at Diego’s monologue, so, in fit of rage, he slaps her across
the face. After he does so, the marks of the plague begin disappearing. The allegory is
willing to actual independently of the crowd and confront the possibility of death
fearlessly. One cannot avoid the inevitability of death, but one can reaffirm one’s
commitment to life:
DIEGO: No.
THE SECRETARY: Then I can’t do anything to harm you. That, too, is down in
the regulations. But I don’t mind telling you it’s the first time I’m glad about that
Camus affirmed this reading in subsequent interviews, stating, “No spectator can in good
faith doubt that this play takes sides with the individual, in that which is noble in the
flesh, in short, with terrestrial love, against the abstractions and the terrors of the
totalitarian state, whether this be Russian, German, or Spanish” (qtd. in Rhein 69).
Diego’s confrontations should be, in Camus’ eyes, how to most justly face oppressive
forces: by not appealing to higher orders, but by facing the possibility of death head-on
Revitalized, Diego returns to the city and delivers a monologue to the townsfolk
to inspire revolt:
“Rub out the stars. [The stars are obliterated.] Open the windows. [Windows are
opened.] Group the sick together. [The crowd obeys.] Make more space for
them. Good. Now stop being frightened; that’s the one condition of deliverance.
Let all of you who can, rise to their feet. Why are you cowering like that? Hold
up your heads; the hour of pride has struck. Throw away your gags and proclaim
with me that you have stopped being afraid. [Raising his arm] O spirit of revolt,
glory of the people, give these gagged men and women the power of your voice!”
(209).
totalitarianism in the allegory. He advocates for a populace that will relinquish their fear
of death in order to wrench control back from institutions that place limits on their
freedom.
Camus recognizes that this behavior, however, may require sacrifice; facing death
does not mean that one will always avoid it. When Diego goes to confront the Plague
directly, he discovers that Victoria has been taken hostage and marked for death. The
Plague offers him a deal: the opportunity to either die in Victoria’s stead or for the two of
them to escape the city, provided that they leave the Plague to continue to “make [his]
own terms with this city” (220). Having already rejected the option of abandonment,
Diego refuses to leave and instead accepts the bargain: he will take Victoria’s place.
However, the Secretary is touched by Diego’s defiance and decides to part ways with the
Plague. Deflated and dissatisfied with a population that will not fall in line, the Plague
decides to take his reign of terror to a more complicit population: “If you want to know
the way I feel about it, I’ll say a dead man is refreshing enough, but he’s not
exits the stage, leaving Diego to die. In this act of defiance, the city is saved.
myth which contains not only his analysis and criticism of twentieth-century society but
also a possible solution to the problems he raises” (69). In this case, the solution is a
relatively simplistic one. Diego triumphs through his individualism: by saying “no” to
totalitarian demands and taking on the consequences for doing so, and so may humanity
The original production for State of Siege, under the direction, and lead acting, of
unanimous critical reviews. According to Camus, “there was no dissenting voice among
the critics. Truly, few plays have ever enjoyed such a unanimous slashing” (“Author’s
Preface”, viii). It enjoyed a short run of twenty-three performances before closing, citing
negative press.
Though it would see occasional performances in smaller venues throughout the world, it
would take almost seventy years before the play would be produced again in Paris. In
2017, the Théâtre de la Ville would stage the first Parisian revival of State of Siege, under
the direction of Emmanuel Demarcy-Mota. The production would tour in the United
States in the fall of the same year, using projected English subtitles for non-Francophone
audiences. Curiously, while the stylistic elements of this production received positive
feedback from reviewers, the production still faced harsh evaluations from critics.
Notably, reviewers did not generally extend blame to the director. Alexis Soloski
of The New York Times slammed the production, lamenting that “not even Mr. Demarcy-
Mota’s stylish interventions can make State of Siege anything more than a hollow
expertly “employing swelling music, video projections and striking visual tableaus,” but
concluded that the production was burdened by the “limitations of Camus' thinly-
theatre critic Jenn McKee expressed that she “felt as though Théâtre de la Ville had, from
a production standpoint, done pretty much everything it could with Camus’ ham-fisted
postwar tale. But it was hard to escape the sense that while the production aims to be a
call to arms against tyranny, it ultimately lacks a beating heart, or a point of genuine
human connection…” (McKee). From this, all reviewers point fingers at the source
What about the source material could be contributing to this assessment? Though
his play shows some minor stylistic changes since he began writing, State of Siege
primarily utilizes many of the same dramaturgical strategies that Camus employed in
Caligula. These choices, while beneficial for showcasing an argument and a didactic
solution to a problem, also create a similar distancing effect that may impede audience
Camus’ dramaturgy has shown growth since his first productions. The script for
State of Siege does notably employ greater use of sound and light than his previous
productions. For example, the opening of the show includes stage directions that call for
“a musical overture built around a theme recalling the sound of an air-raid siren” and the
sound in which “a clock strikes four” (State of Siege 137). Still, as in Caligula, Camus
relies primarily on dialogue to deliver the emotional content of the play. He still utilizes
minimal stage directions – apart from falling down – and uses monologues in order to
express the impact of the Plague’s rule on the populace. As Sonnenfeld points out, “The
effects of the plague on the city are not dramatized on the stage; they are described by the
chorus” (119).
Following his desire to create a modern myth and harkening back to his love of
Greek tragedy, Camus borrows a strategy from his ancient predecessor and employs a
Greek chorus throughout the play. The chorus speaks entirely in unison, usually to
deliver a monologue that spans multiple pages about the emotional impact of the Plague’s
rule:
CHORUS: “Alas! Alas! The last gate is shut, and we are locked up together, we
and the Plague. We can hear nothing any more and henceforth the sea is out of
reach. Sorrow is our companion, we can only turn in dreary circles within this
beleaguered city, cut off from the sounds of leaves and waters, prisoned behind
tall, smooth gates. So now, beset with howling crowds, Cadiz will become a
our plight is surely greater than our sin; we did not deserve this imprisonment.
True, our hearts were not innocent, still we greatly loved the world of nature and
This technique does establish parity between the play and those of the theatrical
tradition Camus admires; by continuing to use elements from Greek drama, the mythic,
audiences to hear a group of actors recite full monologues in complete unison. Rather
than creating a sense of ceremony, the effect is robotic; the notion that an entire crowd
has memorized a common speech is unlikely, thus making the impact more cerebral and
less relatable, creating a psychological distance between the content and the audience
members. This perhaps explains critical receptions such as Wallenberg’s, which claimed,
Camus’ specific choices in dialogue too may contribute to the play’s distancing
effect. While cries of “Alas! Alas!” would be common in the ancient Greek dramas that
be challenging for audience members, expecting to see a play reminiscent of its time
(1948), to develop an authentic connection with the characters. Sonnefeld echoes this
sentiment, asserting, “To write a good play, a dramatist must create effective dialogue;
and this is precisely what Camus was unable to do because he continually transported
novelistic techniques into the theatre” (123). The language does correspond with
structures common in Greek myth, but it does so at the expense of modern accessibility.
several stock characters; only three (Diego, Victoria, and Nada) are given first names,
and the rest are identified purely by their professional title (An Astrologer, The Judge, A
Priest, A Fisherman). This act of depersonalized naming strips the characters of any
motivations; each becomes an oversimplified stereotype that feeds into the allegory. In
For example, early in the play, in response to the comet, many of the unnamed
characters provide a hackneyed piece of advice on how the citizens of Cadiz should greet
ASTROLOGER: “Ladies and gentlemen, let me cast your horoscopes. The past,
present, and the future guaranteed by the fixed stars. The fixed stars, mind you!
[Aside] For, if comets take a hand in it, I’ll have to look round for another job”
(148).
THE SORCERESS: “Here’s mint and sage, here’s balm and rosemary, saffron,
lemon peel, almond paste. Mark my words, these remedies have never been
PRIEST: “To church, all of you! Know that the hour of reckoning has come and
the ancient doom has fallen on our city. It is the penalty with which God has ever
visited cities that have grown corrupt; thus it is He punishes them for their mortal
sin” (153).
Here, each offers advice purely from their professional interest on how to best greet an
unfamiliar phenomenon.
reinforcing Camus’ ideology; through not developing them, they become more clearly
vehicles for his philosophical message. Just as in Caligula, each can stand for a
particular ideology and, based on their interactions with one another, Camus may
establish which he believes are strongest based on whether the characters or their
parishioners. By not characterizing the priest, audience members may focus instead on
what he stands for (religious structures) and draw logical conclusions based on how he
However, while rhetorically strong for establishing the credibility of an idea, this
audiences looking for the opportunity to empathize. In 2017, theatre critic Alexis Soloski
would criticize the play as having “a script more invested in moral philosophy than
In addition, choices in the physical design may also contribute to the audience’s
inability to invest in the production in the way Camus intended. Camus also failed to
consider the impact that his costuming may have on the generalizability of his message.
When the plague is first introduced, he is described in the stage directions as someone
who is “fat, bald-headed, and wears a sort of uniform on which hangs a medal” (159).
Though not explicitly stated, in the original production, director Jean-Louis Barrault
the Plague’s actor with Nazi emblems, anchoring the production in a very specific
symbols, ones that are publicly recognizable and aligned with a very specific military
group, may have unintentionally limited the application of the allegory. Through linking
it with one particular manifestation, the character becomes inexorably linked to that
could not be necessarily be blamed for that explicit linkage, but the decision to give the
character a military uniform at all implies a strong connection with whichever country’s
military assemblage most closely mirrors the costume. This conclusion is seconded by
Sonnenfeld, who, in his review, criticized the decision to make the plague a character at
all: “The greatness of Camus’ use of the myth of the plague in the novel lay precisely in
summoned up in the reader’s mind. The theatre audience, however, forgets the myth of
the plague entirely; on the stage there is a very sarcastic but not unlovable petty
Notably, the 2017 adaptation chose to ignore this stage direction altogether with
more favorable results. Demarcy-Mota substituted the uniform for a black overcoat,
which is linked to no specific culture and thus fairly generalizable. While American
extremism” (Soloski), and “a tyrannical authority” (Frankel), none asserted that the
some ways and unsuccessful in others. In creating an allegory and a decisive solution to
totalitarianism, his conclusions are rhetorically clear; he has created a thoroughly didactic
play. In terms of creating a play that is immersive for audiences, his use of stage
direction, dialogue, and costuming comes up short. As McKee notes, it is “in the end, a
cerebral play that stirs no feelings is sharply limited in its capacity to provoke and
inspire” (McKee). However, as with Exit the King, Eugène Ionesco provides us with the
opposite. In Rhinoceros, Ionesco presents readers with a very similar situation (a town
overrun by totalitarian influences) and a reverse effect. Due to the way he utilizes
staging, characterization, and costuming, his play immerses readers into totalitarian
Chapter 7
Like Camus, Ionesco also had a deeply personal brush with the impact of
totalitarianism. In his native Romania, he had experienced the rise of fascist philosophy
and watched it overtake his colleagues. In his interview with Claude Bonnefoy, he
recalled, “I had made a certain number of friends. And a lot of them – I’m not talking
about 1932, 1933, 1934, 1935 – turned to Fascism. Just as today all intellectuals are
‘progressives,’ as they call themselves, because it’s fashionable. At that time, it was
fashionable to be on the right” (Bonnefoy 22). As the trend progressed, the justification
for totalitarian thought began to pervade university classrooms, including his own
philosophy lectures under professor Nae Ionescu, and Ionesco experienced scholarly
Ionesco experienced this shift first-hand while serving as a literary reviewer for
the Bucharest newspaper, Axa. Although the publication had always leaned to the right,
the editors began increasingly to publish articles that showed sympathy to Corneliu
Codreanu’s Legionary Movement, better known as the Iron Guard. Much like the
National Socialist Party in Germany, the Iron Guard was characterized by extreme
nationalism and strong anti-Semitic sentiments, both of which conflicted with Ionesco’s
“modernist and cosmopolitan views” (Lupas 87), causing him to resign his position after
four editions. (Lupas) Just as Camus had concluded that totalitarianism was unjustified
In his memoir, Present Past Past Present, Ionesco commented on the swift
turnaround time and relative ease in which his previously steadfast anti-Fascist friends
become absolute, fanatic Fascists because in the beginning they gave in on one little
detail. I am well acquainted with this phenomenon: the incubation period has begun;
these are the first symptoms. It takes them between three weeks and two months to
become part of the system” (qtd. in Lupas 86). Here, Ionesco offers a critique of fascism
that mirrors Camus’ criticism of dogma: the absolute, fanatical belief in an unethical
system. Ionesco would later expand on and develop this metaphor into the plotline of
Rhinoceros, his 1960 absurdist play in which the citizens of a small town are overcome
It is notable that both Camus and Ionesco chose to represent collectivist thinking
dying from the infection, all citizens who contract it turn into rhinoceroses.
Using an animal as a symbol also comes with symbolic and theatrical advantages
over Camus’ plague. With an infectious disease in the traditional sense, it is challenging
to employ symptoms in a way that is visible to an audience, perhaps why Camus resorted
to verbalizing the impacts in long monologues and employing the stage direction of
leaves Ionesco with some distinct sensory advantages. Using a rhinoceros allows for the
director to employ sound (panting, charging, roaring) and physical imagery (characters
growing horns, the appearance of rhinoceros heads) to show the impact of the pandemic,
rather than lecture about it. Because of this, Ionesco can utilize visual and auditory
elements of the stage that would be unavailable to Camus. Moreover, the rhinoceros
allows Ionesco’s play to remain anchored in absurdity in a physical way; after all, a
rhinoceros is not exactly a domestic creature that one would expect to find in an urban
setting. Whereas Camus anchors even his sense of the absurd in dialogue alone, Ionesco
developed in Ionesco’s mind long before the play was in production. In one of his
journals, which he would post-date with the notation “around 1940,” he wrote, “The
police are rhinoceroses. The judges are rhinoceroses. You are the only man among the
rhinoceroses. The rhinoceroses wonder how the world could have been led by men. You
yourself wonder: Is it true that the world was led by men?” (Henry). These experiences
likely influenced development of the metaphor used in the play; after all, according to
and it mirrors, as Ionesco points out, the difficulty of standing firm even in one’s own
mind against the collective and its dominant ideologies.” (161-162). In later interviews,
mutation. I don’t know if you have noticed it, but when people no longer share your
opinions, when you can no longer make yourself understood by them, one has the
impression of being confronted with monsters – rhinos, for example.” (qtd. in Esslin
181-182).
unkempt and creased clothes” and “everything about him indicates negligence”
(Rhinoceros 4). In the opening scene, he is lunching at a café with his friend Jean, and
the stage directions further emphasize his disheveled nature; Ionesco indicates that he
“seems weary, half-asleep; from time to time he yawns” (Rhinoceros 4). When
juxtaposed with his friend and lunchtime companion Jean, described as “very fastidiously
dressed” and with shoes that are “yellow and well-polished,” the impression given to the
audience is that Bérenger carries a lower of level social influence. Unlike Camus’
characterization of Diego and Nada in the Prologue in State of Siege, which relies entirely
develop their characters. When Bérenger later delivers an apology for running late for
their meal and Jean begins criticizing his friend’s careless lifestyle, the dialogue
emphasizes a conclusion that many will have already drawn from their impression of his
costuming. Thus, the visuals and dialogue compliment one another, rather than, in
In the midst of their conversation, they are interrupted by the approach of the first
rhinoceros. In this introduction, too, Ionesco strays away from narrative retellings and
utilizes sound to impart the first impression of the pandemic. He includes the stage
direction: “[At this moment a noise is heard, far off, but swiftly approaching of a beast
panting in its headlong course, and of a long trumpeting]” (7). The decision to use
noise, rather than a physical representation, to introduce the rhinoceros allows the
audience to utilize imagination and conjure up their own images of what could be behind
the predatory sound. Much as in a horror film in which the monster does not appear on
screen, audience members are given the freedom to interpret the bestial sounds and
mentally impose features that they find especially terrifying. Moreover, the idea that a
inconveniences them. As the noise begins to increase in volume, Jean too must shout to
be heard across the table; the stage direction indicates that he is “almost shouting to make
himself heard above the noise, which he has not been conscious of” (8). Audience
members can pick up on the discomposure that comes with having to shout over loud
In his analysis of the play, James Mills commented on this stylistic technique,
stating, “Like Antonin Artaud, the avant-garde critic whom he emulated, Ionesco sought
to substitute a new symbolic language, or language in space and movement, for the
spoken one” (qtd. in Bennett 157). Consistently throughout the play, sound and visuals
allow audience members to gain further impressions about the spread of rhinoceritis. In
Act I, a rhinoceros races through the town offstage, conveyed entirely through “a sound
of rapid galloping” (Rhinoceros 24). As it stampedes by, two characters fall over in their
chairs, presumably at the sight of it, while a waitress drops a tray, “breaking the glasses”
(25). The destruction includes some casualties, namely a housewife’s cat. Ionesco
includes a stage direction in which “a piteous mewing is heard, then an equally piteous
cry of a woman” (26). When she arrives on stage, cradling the corpse, she merely
confirms what the audience has already determined: the rhinoceros has trampled her cat
to death. These effects intensify as the play progresses. In Act III, the destruction has
escalated from trampled cats to murder; during one of the rampages, a rhinoceros
“emerges from the orchestra pit under the window and passes swiftly, left to right” with a
Though the rhinoceroses cause great, and intensifying, destruction all over town,
there are remarkably few instances in which characters discuss the effects at length; they
are mostly showcased physically or audibly, thereby not requiring dialogue. In a review
of the 2002 Berkley production, directed by Barbara Damashek, critic Telory W. Davies
noted, “With each rhino entrance, at least one prop is dropped, spilled, or broken to mark
Much like Camus in State of Siege, Ionesco also uses his characters symbolically
to support his pandemic theme. In both plays, townsfolk are overtaken by rhinoceritis
and, one by one, begin to transform. Unlike State of Siege, however, the casualties are
not an anonymous herd, but named characters. The pandemic initially takes some of
though, it begins to infect his closest friends. While Camus’ use of the Greek chorus
Ionesco’s is much more personal. It shows that the attitude cannot only happen
The first of Bérenger’s friends to turn is Jean, who is incidentally the only one to
transform on stage. At the beginning of Act II, Jean is bedridden, having come down
with a cough. Bérenger arrives to take care of him. As Bérenger examines his friend, he
notices that Jean is missing many of the symptoms of a traditional illness. For example,
he takes Jean’s pulse and discovers that it is normal (62). However, Bérenger notes that
Jean is beginning to turn a shade of green, and stage directions indicate that his voice is
becoming “even hoarser” (61). Even stranger, Jean is developing a bump on his head:
JEAN: That’s the limit! [Touching his forehead.] I can feel something. I’m
going to have a look, in the bathroom. [He gets up abruptly and goes to the
bathroom. Bérenger watches him as he goes. Then, from the bathroom:] It’s
true, I have got a bump. [He comes back; his skin has become greener.] So you
The stage makeup here physicalizes the ailment in a way that State of Siege does not.
The onset is gradual, and stage makeup provides a physical transformation. Each time
Jean steps offstage, the makeup gradually increases. This mimics the onset of a real
ailment, in that symptoms gradually increase rather than, as in State of Siege, occurring
immediately. Moreover, the gradual reveal gives the scene a greater sense of tension,
thus allowing audience members to connect to the situation in a visceral way. The
the room, “like a wild beast in a cage, from one wall to the other” (64). He fiddles with
his pyjama top, buttoning and unbuttoning, because he “felt uncomfortable in [his]
clothes” (64). His voice too gradually changes and becomes hoarse, to the point at which
moral standards!
BÉRENGER: Nature?
JEAN: Nature has its own laws. Morality’s against Nature. (67)
The verbiage in this exchange is recognizable to those familiar with fascist rhetoric. It
bears a striking resemblance to claims in Mein Kampf, notably that Nature “by no means
believes in an equality of the races, but . . . recognizes their higher or lesser value and
feels itself obligated to promote the victory of the better and stronger, and demand the
subordination of the inferior and weaker in accordance with the eternal will that
dominates this universe" (qtd. in Shirer 88). By adding this dialogue over his physical
transformation, the audience begins to associate Jean’s totalitarian rhetoric with his
changing physical form, for the verbiage and the affliction go hand-in-hand. Thus, Jean’s
transformation carries a different resonance than that of Camus’ Greek Chorus. Whereas
Ionesco uses makeup, stage directions, and dialogue to convey the full experience of a
rhinoceros pandemic, Camus’ plague, whose effects are only relayed in dialogue, is
different argument for why becoming a rhinoceros is permissible. For example, Dudard,
tolerant to a fault, justifies his position on the rhinoceritis epidemic as seeing both sides
of a complex moral issue. He dignifies the rhinoceroses and makes claims that, if the
most intelligent among them have capitulated and become rhinoceroses, it must be
because they have freely chosen what they consider to be a good argument: “If he was a
genuine thinker, as you say, he couldn’t have got carried away. He must have weighted
all the pros and cons before deciding” (Rhinoceros 87). When Bérenger screams at the
growing crowd of rhinoceroses that he will never join them, Dudard delights at their
movements, saying, “They’re just going round and round the house. They’re playing!
rhinoceritis to infect his thought process. As Ionesco noted in his own companions when
they “gave in on one little detail,” he begins to see their life as a plausible option for
himself, citing that “certain illnesses are good for you” (76). He eventually exits the
stage for his transformation, claiming that it comes only out of a desire to understand the
rhinoceros psyche: “…if you’re going to criticize, it’s best to do so from the inside. I’m
not going to abandon them. I won’t abandon them” (93). Bérenger mourns his
transformation, citing that he was “too good-hearted” (93). From the loss of Dudard,
audience members can recognize the danger in the paradox of tolerance; by extending
Holocaust deniers. Intensely distrustful, he refuses to accept any evidence that comes
second hand. He refuses to believe the recent news stories about increased rhinoceros
sightings (“It’s obvious they were just making it up. You put too much trust in these
journalists; they don’t care what they invent to sell their wretched newspapers!”) (41),
and, when Daisy, Bérenger’s love interest, pipes up that she witnessed a rhinoceros in
town, he dismisses her account as mistaken: “Get away with you! And I thought you
were a sensible girl!” (41). Botard only concedes to believe in rhinoceroses when he
encounters one first-hand; Mrs. Boeuf’s husband makes an appearance outside of his
business, looking for his wife. Even then, he becomes convinced that it is a sort of
conspiracy, and he rails against the transformations: “I’ll let you know the purpose and
the meaning of this whole plot! I’ll unmask the perpetrators!” (54).
Based on his public outcry, it would seem that Botard should be immune to
rhinoceritis. However, in Act II, Daisy reveals that this is not the case:
BÉRENGER: I don’t believe it. He was against it. You must be mistaken. He
protested. Dudard has just been telling me. Isn’t that so, Dudard?
DAISY: I know he was against it. But it didn’t stop him turning twenty-four
DUDARD: Well, he must have changed his mind! Everybody has he right to do
that. (88)
Botard’s transformation emphasizes that even those who were most opposed to the idea
Eventually, only Bérenger and Daisy remain: the last living humans. Bérenger
looks to her to help him repopulate the planet, now that everyone else has turned, but she
rejects the proposition, revealing that she has no interest in ever having children because
“it’s a bore” (102). It is then revealed that she is attracted to the idea of becoming a
rhinoceros because of the creature’s immense power: “I feel a bit ashamed of what you
call love – this morbid feeling, this male weakness. And female, too. It doesn’t compare
with the ardour and the tremendous energy emanating from all these creatures around us”
(103). Bérenger too acknowledges this appeal, relaying “You think they’re stronger than
me, stronger than us. Maybe they are” (104). Daisy most closely resembles individuals
who become attracted to movements because, rather than authentically embracing their
The use of sound and imagery becomes especially apparent in this final scene of
the play. As Daisy considers abandoning Bérenger, the set begins to undergo a
transformation. The rhinoceros noises, which at the beginning of the play were decidedly
The stage direction in this moment indicates that the sounds “have become melodious”
(104). This allows Ionesco to convey through auditory means that becoming a rhinoceros
When Daisy decides to leave him, Bérenger realizes in this scene that that the city
is now entirely populated by rhinoceroses and that he is the only human left. During his
monologue, he searches for old pictures of himself. He finds three in a drawer and places
them on the wall, juxtaposing them with the mounted rhinoceros heads that have,
according to the stage directions, started appearing midway through the act:
[When he hangs the pictures one sees that they are of an old man, a huge woman,
and another man. The ugliness of these pictures is in contrast to the rhinoceros
heads which have become very beautiful. Bérenger steps back to contemplate the
pictures.]
BÉRENGER: I’m not good looking, I’m not good looking. (106)
From the descriptions of the pictures, the audience can quickly determine that
none of these photos literally depict Bérenger, given the age and gender described.
However, by identifying himself in the photos and distinguishing himself from the
rhinoceros head, he describes a kinship with them that is missing from trophy: a kinship
of species. Thus, without having to verbally spell out the connection, the audience is able
to quickly determine that Bérenger is speaking for those who have retained their
humanity in the face of rhinoceros, or collectivist, takeover. The inclusion of these props
broadens the generalizability of the symbol; it is not a matter of Bérenger specifically vs.
the rhinoceroses and collectivist thinking, but of all humanity vs. rhinoceroses and
collectivist thinking. Moreover, by adding the dialogue “I’m not good looking,” the
audience can see how Bérenger too is beginning to doubt the appeal of remaining a
human.
mourns humanity and determines that, though he is tempted to turn into a rhinoceros and
BÉRENGER: … I’ve gone past changing. I want to, I really do, but I can’t, I just
can’t. I can’t stand the sight of me. I’m too ashamed! [He turns his back on the
mirror.] I’m so ugly! People who try to hang on to their individuality always
come to a bad end! [He suddenly snaps out of it.] Oh well, too bad! I’ll take on
the whole of them! I’ll put up a fight against the lot of them, the whole lot of
them! I’m the last man left, and I’m staying that way until the end. I’m not
capitulating!” (107).
Ionesco ends the scene simply: with a stage direction for “CURTAIN” (107). While
successful, whether his actions will impact the other rhinoceroses, or how even he intends
to maintain his individuality. Ionesco has provided the problem, but he has delivered no
solution. This is consistent with his self-proclaimed theatrical philosophy: “…to deliver a
message to the world, to wish to direct is course, to save it, is the business of the founders
which he can offer only a testimony, not a didactic message…Any work which was
Parisian premiere came in January 1960 at the Odeon Theatre, coincidentally also under
the directorial authority of Jean-Louis Barrault, the director who had first staged State of
Siege. The production met with rave reviews that praised the production for its “triumph
is in the delicate combination of horror and whimsy” (Fowlie 44). Jean Vigneron of La
Croix described the production as “a completely clear work, with its own limpid
symbolism, all the more powerful for being accessible and all the greater because
multiple theatres abroad, including a London production in April of 1960 starring Sir
Laurence Olivier and Orson Welles and a 1961 Broadway adaptation with Zero Mostel.
Critics such as Deborah Gaensbauer hypothesize that the play’s success was “due in part
to its accessible message and also to a growing acceptance of the theater of the absurd”
(58).
Some critics, however, criticized the play for describing a problem, but offering
no solutions as to how to deal with it. To this, Ionesco responded, “But I never meant to
offer a solution. I simply meant to show how a mutation is possible in collective thought,
to show how it comes about. I was quite simply, phenomenologically, describing the
If this was his aim, his choice in staging was consistent with it. Ionesco provides
Concluding Remarks
of the absurd, Ionesco replied, “I have the feeling that these writers – who are serious and
important – were talking about absurdity and death, but that they never really lived these
themes, that they did not feel them within themselves in an almost irrational, visceral
way, that all this was not deeply inscribed in their language. With them it was still
rhetoric, eloquence. With Adamov and Beckett, it really is a very naked reality that is
conveyed through the apparent dislocation of language. What once looked like the
dislocation of language now seems very clear to us…” (Bonnefoy 122 – 123).
From this, we may perhaps infer that Ionesco was fully cognizant of both his own
stylistic choices and those of Camus; he could recognize the linguistic difference between
works that were merely “talking about,” or proselytizing about, the absurd (Caligula and
State of Siege) and ones that attempted to make it a “very naked reality” (Exit the King
and Rhinoceros) for the audience. His use of physical movement, auditory cues, and
careful staging aids his success at creating the latter. As for Camus, his use of dialogue
as a crutch betrays his primary background as a philosopher: a role where telling, rather
than showing, is commonplace. While his message is certainly imparted in each of his
plays, perhaps taking a cue out of Ionesco’s book and using the physical space of the
stage would have saved him a barrage of criticism about the hollowness of State of Siege.
Then again, the chance of Camus changing his style would have been highly
unlikely, for, in his own words, “I have the misfortune of liking only one type of play
Works Cited
Aronson, Ronald. Camus & Sartre: The Story of a Friendship and the Quarrel That
Bakewell, Sarah. At the Existentialist Cafe: Freedom, Being, and Apricot Cocktails. New
reasons-to-be-an-existentialist.
Baldwin, Jane. “‘The State Of Siege’ (L'état De Siège): A Political Warning.” The
political-warning/.
Bennett, Michael Y. “Bérenger, The Sisyphean Hero.” Reassessing the Theatre of the
Absurd: Camus, Beckett, Ionesco, Genet, and Pinter, Palgrave Macmillan, 2013,
pp. 89–100.
Bensen Cain, Rebecca. The Socratic Method: Plato's Use of Philosophical Drama.
Continuum, 2007.
Bonnefoy, Claude, and Eugène Ionesco. Conversations with Eugène Ionesco. New York:
www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p00547h8
Camus, Albert. “Albert Camus on Hiroshima. War Journal of 8 August 1945.” Combat
www.humaniteinenglish.com/spip.php?article2842.
Camus, Albert. "Author's Preface." Trans. Stuart Gilbert. Caligula & Three Other Plays.
Camus, Albert. The Myth of Sisyphus. Trans. Justin O'Brien. London: H. Hamilton, 1965.
Print.
Camus, Albert. Notebooks: 1951-1959. Translated by Ryan Bloom, Ivan R. Dee, 2008.
Camus, Albert. The Rebel. Translated by Anthony Bower, Alfred A. Knopf, Inc., 1956.
Camus, Albert. “Why Spain?” Resistance, Rebellion, and Death: Essays, translated by
Press, 2012.
Frankel, Tony. “Los Angeles Theater Preview: STATE OF SIEGE (Théâtre De La Ville
www.stageandcinema.com/2017/10/03/state-of-siege/.
Fowlie, Wallace. “New Plays of Ionesco and Genet.” The Tulane Drama Review, vol. 5,
Gillespie, John. “Sartre and Theatrical Ambiguity.” Sartre Studies International, vol. 18,
Giroux, Henry A. "Breaking Into the Movies." America on the Edge (2006): 117-28.
Guppy, Shusha. "Eugène Ionesco, The Art of Theater No. 6." The Paris Review. The
Healy, Patrick. “Re-Enter Ionesco: Broadway Awaits.” The New York Times, 24 Mar.
2009, www.nytimes.com/2009/03/25/theater/25rush.html.
Henry, William A. “Fascism, Fury, Fear and Farce.” Time, Time Inc., 24 June 2001,
content.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,164149,00.html.
Ionesco, Eugène. Exit the King. Trans. Loretta A. Layer. Erie: Mercyhurst College, 1988.
Print.
Ionesco, Eugène. Rhinoceros. Translated by Derek Prouse, Grove Press Inc., 1960.
Isaac, Jeffrey C. Arendt, Camus, and Modern Rebellion. Yale University Press, 2008.
www.uky.edu/~eushe2/Pajares/JamesDilemmaOfDeterminism.html
Kobrak, Christopher, et al. “Business, Political Risk, and Historians in the 20th Century.”
doi:10.1353/jhi.1998.0024.
Journalism.” Journal of Modern Literature, vol. 37, no. 3, 2014, pp. 74–91.,
doi:10.2979/jmodelite.37.3.74.
McKee, Jenn. “Camus' Leaden ‘L’Etat De Siège’ Is a Slog Even for the Great Théâtre De
La Ville.” Pulp: Arts Around Ann Arbor, Ann Arbor District Library, 16 Oct.
2017, pulp.aadl.org/node/367604.
Outson, Philip. “Post-War France.” France in the 20th Century, The MacMillan Press
Sartre, Jean-Paul. Being and Nothingness. Tr. Hazel Barnes. New York: Washington
Sartre, Jean-Paul. “An Explication on The Stranger.” Camus: The Stranger, edited by
2007. Print.
Schechner, Richard, Ionesco, and Leonard C. Pronko. "An Interview with Ionesco." The
Tulane Drama Review 7.3 (1963): 161-68. JSTOR [JSTOR]. Web. 3 Feb. 2017.
Schopenhauer, Arthur. On the Freedom of the Will. Oxford, OX, UK: Blackwell,
1985. Print
www.nytimes.com/2017/11/03/theater/review-state-of-siege-camus.html.
Spanos, William V. “Abraham, Sisyphus, and the Furies: Some Introductory Notes on
Stone, Greg. “Why Camus Was Not an Existentialist.” Philosophy Now, 2016,
http://philosophynow.org/issues/115/Why_Camus_Was_Not_An_Existentialist.
Wahl, Jean, et al. “Heidegger and Kierkegaard: An Investigation into the Original
www.wbur.org/artery/2017/11/08/state-of-siege-artsemerson.
Ward, Candace, editor. Everyman, and Other Miracle and Morality Plays. Dover
Publications, 1995.
http://www.theage.com.au/news/arts-reviews/exit-the-
king/2007/03/01/1172338775013.html.
Zaretsky, Robert. A Life Worth Living: Albert Camus and the Quest for Meaning.