In The Plague, Albert Camus (1947) tells the story of a pathogen’s spreading uncontrollably through a small city on the Algerian coast. Camus’ novel is the interpretive frame for considering three different narratives that we might construct today to make sense of the Covid-19 crisis in the contexts of our own personal lives. Building on the psychological concept of narrative identity, I describe life stories that construe the virus as (1) the malevolent manifestation of a discrete episode in time, (2) the motivating adversary that prompts a long-term narrative of redemption, and (3) an enduring nemesis who must be managed within a story that bears honest witness to human suffering. In discussing these three life narrative forms, I draw widely from psychological research on generativity and the redemptive self, on studies of wisdom and ego integrity, and on an in-depth psychological biography of the current president of the United States.
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