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James Victor Jordan Reviews The Plague by Albert Camus

THE PLAGUE by Albert Camus Reviewed by James Victor Jordan

Five Stars!

Pestilence Then and Now

The Plague was first published in 1946.  Eleven years later, its author, Albert Camus, became the youngest person to be awarded the Nobel Prize in literature.  The place of this masterpiece is cemented in the canons of literary fiction and existential philosophy.  This review presents the prescience of The Plague and shows that it is not an anti-fascist fable.

The Plague is set in the Mediterranean seaport of Oran, Algeria during eleven months in the late 1940s. It purports to chronicle an epidemic of bubonic plague from the point of view of two characters: Bernard Rieux, a physician in his early thirties (Camus’s age when he wrote the novel), and Jean Tarrou, a visitor to Oran who is trapped within the city walls when a quarantine is imposed to prevent spread of the disease. 

As a result of COVID-19—Coronavirus Disease-2019—many people are now reading or rereading The Plague.  As I write this review on April 1, 2020, The Plague is an Amazon bestseller.  The main takeaway from this novel is a warning not to forget past disasters.  If a disaster is forgotten, lessons learned from it will be forgotten as well. The Plague concludes:

“And indeed, as he listened to the cries of joy rising from the town, Rieux remembered such joy is always imperiled.  He knew what those jubilant crowds did not know but could have learned from books: that the plague bacillus never dies or disappears for good; that it can lie dormant for years and years in furniture and linen-chests; that it bides its time in bedrooms, cellars, trunks, and bookshelves; and that perhaps the day would come when, for the bane and the enlightening of men, it would rouse up its rats again and send them forth to die in a happy city.” (Emphasis supplied)

The chronicle of the fictional Oran plague is conveyed through the eyes and thoughts of Rieux, as though the story were told by a third-person narrator, and through the diaries of Tarrou, which the narrator argues are objective because Tarrou is a visitor to and not a resident of Oran. With the flourish of an elegant literary twist, in the last section of the book the narrator reveals that he is Rieux.  He has concealed his identity because he wants the reader to trust his chronicle as objective.  Objectivity is significant.  If the reader trusts the narration, she is less likely to forget the horrors of the plague the narrator describes, its bane (the extent of the catastrophe) and its enlightening (its lessons).  

The novel explores fundamental issues of western philosophy: is the Christian god benevolent or wrathful, do we have free will or is our fate divinely determined, and how do we derive meaning from life or from death?  Rieux and Tarrou are atheists.  Their lack of belief in god or in death having meaning contrasts with the beliefs of Father Paneloux, a Jesuit priest.  Paneloux delivers a sermon, preaching that the plague has been sent by an angry god to punish the citizens of Oran for their wickedness and sin.  Well who could blame Paneloux for confusing what plagues could be—divine vengeance—from what they must be. This is an error in interpretation of Scripture that is delivered to this day from the pulpits of some American Evangelists.  These sermons often invoke the story in “Exodus” of the pharaoh who on ten occasions broke his promise to let god’s people go.  In retaliation god visited ten plagues upon the pharaoh’s people, each more terrible than the one before it.  The lesson?  Plagues must be punishments for breaking covenants with god because in this instance they were.  

But Scripture does not say that divine wrath is the only cause of plague, a lesson neatly tucked into the novel by Camus.  As the toll of the Oran plague increases, it takes the life of Jacques Othon, a small child, an innocent boy, whose excruciating losing battle with the ravages of the plague is witnessed by Rieux, Tarrou, and Paneloux.  When Rieux asks Paneloux if Jacques was punished for wickedness, Paneloux reconsiders. He then delivers a new and different sermon in which he claims (without referencing Job) that the plague was sent by god to test the faith of the residents of Oran rather than to punish them for sin. Later Paneloux is infected with the plague.  He declines treatment or palliative care, claiming that god alone will determine whether he suffers, survives, or dies.  As the plague is no respecter of age, race, innocence, guilt, political persuasion, faith, or the lack thereof, it inflicts Paneloux with grievous pain and a gruesome death.  A plague is indiscriminately insidious.    

A week after the collapse of the World Trade Center towers on September 11, 2001, The Rev. Jerry Falwell Jr. and Pat Robertson asserted on a telecast that a wrathful god had allowed the terrorists to succeed in their deadly mission because the United States had become “a nation of abortion, homosexuality, secular schools and courts, and the American Civil Liberties Union.”  Falwell, Robertson, and others of their ilk never have explained the contradiction between a sinful America being at fault for the 9/11 tragedy and their other contention, that Islam is at fault. 

It has been said that Donald Trump will not read a memo or briefing paper that is longer than one page. Whether this is apocryphal or literal, with confidence it can be surmised that as late as, March 31, 2020 when Trump extended his social distancing “guidelines” until the end of May, Trump had still not learned the lessons of the importance of isolation to combat the spread of pandemics. Today, April 1, 2020, Trump was asked if he would change his social-distancing guidelines into a national stay-at-home order that conformed with the policy of most of the states, he said that he would not because there had to be flexibility. 

The evidence that sequestration and quarantine is a necessary tool confront plague (pandemics) can be found in the history of the 1918 Spanish Flu pandemic, The Plague, or other books that would have alerted Trump to the “thirty or so great plagues known to history [that] had accounted for nearly a hundred million deaths” that Rieux thinks of in the early days of the Oran plague.  “The doctor remembered the plague of Constantinople that, according to Procopius, caused ten thousand deaths in a single day.”  Had Trump learned from these books or accounts he would have understood what doctors since the Dark Ages have known: quarantines limit the toll of highly infectious diseases. Yet he was late promulgating his guidelines and still has not acted on the need for a national stay-at-home order.

This brings me to my first thesis, that The Plague is prescient in that the lessons from disaster will be forgotten.  Although warnings of the threat of a novel coronavirus pandemic were presented to Trump in late 2019 and throughout 2020 by epidemiologists, until three weeks ago he used his bully pulpit to politicize the disease, using it as a weapon against his opponents while claiming that it was his opponents who were responding to the pandemic to victimize him.  On March 19, 2020, he tweeted:

“The Fake News Media and their partner, the Democrat (sic) Party is doing everything . . . to inflame the coronavirus situation, far beyond what the facts would warrant.”

Trump did not acknowledge the pandemic until March 17, 2020, when he asserted that he’d always known about it.  He did not pronounce his social-distancing guidelines until March 21.  On March 9, 2020 there were 23 recorded deaths in the United States attributable to COVID-19.  On March 21, there were 302.  On March 31, there were close to 4,000 deaths.  Trump still has not learned lessons from books or from experts who told him what was in those books about plagues and how society must respond to them. Lessons about quarantine and isolation learned in the Dark Ages and practiced since were lost on Trump. Rather, despite public warnings by his chief medical advisors that a tsunami of infections and death was headed our way, he relied on his solitary fantasies of reality that so happened to conform to edicts of religious-right faith that have no basis in the pandemic lessons of history or science, lessons that have still not been learned by Falwell, whose Liberty University remains open and requires students to attend classes. 

The Plague is prescient in its prediction that lessons from past disasters will be forgotten.

My second thesis is that The Plague is not an anti-fascist fable as stated in an article published in The New Yorker on March 30, 2020 by Dr. Jill Lapore, chair of the history department at Harvard and a prolific contributor to the magazine. In her article titled “What our Contagion Fables are Really About,” Dr. Lapore misstates what The Plague is about.  She says of the pestilence in Oran: “The plague is, of course, the virus of fascism.”  Well, no it is not. Camus knew how to spell fascism. 

The Plague is not, as Dr. Lapore would suggest, satire, like Animal Farm. The rats are not characters with human traits. They are mere rodents carrying fleas that carry the disease.  There is no evidence in the pages of The Plague that supports Dr. Lapore’s “the rat as metaphor” understanding of the novel. Her contention that Camus thought that fascists were rats is not presented in the novel or reasonably gleaned from it.  It is unavailing to her fable theory of The Plague.  

To interpret The Plague as political satire is to dismiss illness as a worthy subject of literary fiction.  It is to miss an important lesson about plagues: they are indiscriminate killers, blind to politics, although the ideologies of those blind to the disease can affect its outcome.  To proclaim that The Plague is an anti-fascist fable is to belittle this serious book about a public health disaster, it diminishes the severity of plague, it obscures if not ignores the salient public-health lesson that plagues must be confronted with quarantines and isolation.  To emphasize this point, consider by way of example that while Jerry Falwell and others with a similar religious axe to grind may be rats, nothing would be accomplished by promoting, erroneously, The Plague as a fable or as an anti-religious right polemic.   Promoting the novel thusly would be a distraction, turning a blind eye to Trump’s criminal neglect or ineptitude, his breach of his oath of office to provide for the common defense, to promote the general welfare.

For the President of the United States not to have learned a millennial-old lesson about plaguesthe efficacy of quarantine, of sequestration—is a travesty and a tragedy.  To misunderstand the concluding message of the plague—the dangers of forgetting the travails of disaster by trivializing a dreaded disease with a too-cute metaphor of rats as fascists is to misunderstand this literary and philosophical jewel. 

This Post Has 8 Comments

  1. Anonymous

    Terrific review, James! In your hands Camus’ novel justly fulfills Pounds criteria for literature: “news that stays news.” A look at Boccaccio’s Decameron next?

  2. Chris Miller

    An interesting and timely review. And very well penned and researched. I’ll have to read the book myself to see if it really is as devoid of metaphor as you suggest. But I’m guessing you’re right. Literary types often want to over-project. I’ve even read that Little Red Riding Hood is some sort of communist manifesto.

    I also enjoyed (though do not agree with) your politics and epidemiology. But then I probably lean slightly more toward the paranoid it’s-all-a-fiction-created-by-some-global-cartel-to-enslave-us-and-impose-some-new-world-order nut cases than the panic-stricken it-hangs-in-the-air-for-hours-and-anyone-might-be-carrying-it-as-it-mutates-into-even-more-virulent-forms nut cases. But, for all the studies, I don’t feel very well informed (just entertained).

    Interesting your reporting that Donald Trump will not read a memo or briefing paper that is longer than one page, since the legislation he signed (that suspends the Freedom of Information Act for the Fed and bails out TBTF banks and hedge funds (again) was over 800 pages. Also once read that anyone wanting to appeal a Florida death sentence to Governor Jeb Bush should use pop-ups instead of written argument.

  3. jamesvictorjordan

    Thanks Chris. I did not know that the new US $2.2 trillion COVID-19 relief bill suspended the FOI Act. I don’t believe that most (probably any) members of congress actually read the legislation they vote on. And I’d wager $2.2 trillion that Trump didn’t read the $2.2 trillion COVID-19 relief bill .

  4. Hassan R

    I find it remarkable how plagues/contagions have shifted over time from an existential and even religious concern (how did we morally cause this? is God angry at us?) to one of epidemiological concerns (how is it spread; how do we stop the spread). I am sure in certain circles, the religious issue dominates–unfortunately. In the same way HIV was regarded by some as a sign of God’s wrath, COVID-19 will be regarded the same. Again unfortunately.

    I though am reassured that such thinking is mostly gone–at least from many circles. Infectious disease is not because of God’s wrath–rather it is a consequence of the unending,longstanding interplay between viruses and humans (and viruses and animals), a simple consequence of life itself. Viruses are not good nor evil nor do they represent good nor evil in a society. They are a remnant of life in the same way that we as humans are.

    We will focus on COVID-19 with a scientific eye…and in so doing, we will do ‘good’ rather than ‘evil.’

    Thank you for this read.

  5. Tom Holland

    In reading this amazingly insightful review, the most impactful statement was that of “The Plague being prescient in that the lessons of disaster will be forgotten.” This statement reminds me of my parents, both of whom had lived through the Great Depression. They had witnessed horrific poverty and despair first hand, and it had left them with a fear of the cruelty and indifference in their fellow man. It ingrained in them a kind of grim self-reliance. For me, a product of the post-war middle class, these echoes of my parent’s past seemed strange for dealing with life. While I could empathize, I could never quite understand what they had gone through. Not now. I am left wondering how this will shape those that emerge on the other side. And I am saddened that whatever we glean from this dark chapter, that knowledge has the shelf life of human mortality.

    In other words, humankind forgets everything. I read Camus in my first year of college. Emphasis was on “existentialism,” not malaria in Algeria. The Spanish Flu was never mentioned in school or college. Flu in 1968? Anybody remember that? H1N1? We forget everything which is why we are doomed to repeat every mistake. It’s why history keeps repeating. It’s why our grandchildren will have little to no memory of Covid-19. It’s why nobody, no government or bureaucrat or civilian was prepared for this.

    it’s what Jimmy is saying in his review above. It’s amazing the human race has survived this far.

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