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suicide-as-communication-failure
The narrator discusses suicide as an ineffective way to convey suffering or gain understanding, since the dead cannot witness others' reactions.
1 chapter across 1 book
The Fall (1956)Albert Camus
Chapter 7
In this chapter from Albert Camus's 'The Fall,' the narrator reflects on human isolation, judgment, and the paradoxical desire for innocence despite inherent flaws. Using the bleak Dutch landscape as a metaphor, he explores themes of loneliness, the futility of suicide as a means of communication, and the inevitability of being judged by society. The narrator reveals his disillusionment with human relationships, the pain of being misunderstood, and the universal human tendency to assert one's innocence while condemning others.