
Product Description When her mother was in the hospital with terminal cancer, Simone had time to reminisce about her mother's early life, as Simone and her sister, Poupette, prepared to face the decision of whether to prolong a life when it is full of suffering. Like most people, they believed that it would be better to die than to continue to suffer, but their mother had a very different view of the matter. Francoise de Beauvoir had finally found happiness in her life, and she truly believed she could find happiness in her own suffering. Considered by many to be the master work by Simone de Beauvoir, A Very Easy Death focuses on death and the other limitations in one's life and with what attitude one approaches them. Through her mother's beauty, her smile, and her pride in her life and in herself, Simone learned that to be human and to have individual choice are the most important aspects of existence.
This work investigates the ethical and existential complexities of witnessing a parent's terminal decline and the philosophical implications of choosing when to prolong life. Simone de Beauvoir, a prominent French intellectual and philosopher, utilizes her personal experience caring for her mother, Francoise, to examine the intersection of individual autonomy, suffering, and the inevitability of mortality. The text serves as a rigorous inquiry into how human beings confront the limitations of existence when faced with the finality of death.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Critics and scholars frequently cite this work as a foundational text in the literature of bereavement and existential philosophy. Readers often note the stark, clinical precision of the prose, which avoids sentimentality in favor of a raw, unflinching examination of the human condition.
Page Count:
92
Publication Date:
1969-01-07
Publisher:
Penguin UK
ISBN-10:
0140029672
ISBN-13:
9780140029673
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