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The Myth of Sisyphus

By: Albert Camus - Read: March 27, 2024 - Rating: 7/10

The Myth of Sisyphus is a short interpretational essay on a famous Greek myth: the story of Sisyphus.

Sisyphus is condemned by the Gods. He is forced to push the boulder to the top of the mountain. And as he reaches the top, the boulder rolls back. Sisyphus starts agian. And he is met with the same loop of pushing the boulder (again and again). But Sisyphus doesn't give up. He becomes the absurd hero, fulfilling his punishment for eternity, knowing it is all absurd.

It was Camus's way of showing that life is absurd, inherently meaningless. You ask for meaning from life. And you are met with nothing. Life doesn't respond with a carefully planned framework to live your life. And Camus advocates for "revolt." He says we need to build our meaning if life doesn't offer one. Because, as per him, "one has to imagine Sisyphus happy!"