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Camille.
Alexandre Dumas fils turns an affair between a courtesan and a young bourgeois lover into a tragic novel of love, sacrifice, class judgment, and social performance.
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Edition details
- Alexandre Dumas fils
- DotBooks
- DotBooks
- Paperback
- Standard white
- 109
- en
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About this book
Camille is one of the great nineteenth-century novels of doomed love. Alexandre Dumas fils follows the relationship between Marguerite Gautier and Armand Duval as passion collides with money, illness, reputation, and the strict hypocrisies of Parisian society. The book moves quickly, but its emotional force comes from how relentlessly public judgment shapes private feeling.
Themes
The novel explores desire, sacrifice, class anxiety, respectability, gendered double standards, illness, and the cost of being loved only on impossible terms. Marguerite remains unforgettable not because she is idealized, but because Dumas lets her intelligence and vulnerability cut through the social role imposed on her.
Why readers still return to it
Readers return to Camille for its directness, pathos, and its sharp understanding of the way romance is entangled with status and moral theater. It continues to matter both as a moving novel in its own right and as the story that inspired Verdi’s La Traviata.
Further context
First published in 1848, the novel draws on Dumas fils’s own relationship with Marie Duplessis and became one of the defining modern myths of tragic love in European literature.
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Camille
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