
About This Novel
Albert Camus's "The Stranger" fully exposes the absurdity of the world and the opposition between man and society by creating the image of Meursault, an "outsider" who is deviant and incompatible with the world. Meursault's behavior seems absurd and unnatural, but it is his weapon to fight against this absurd world. "The Outsider" has been reprinted many times, with tens of millions of copies printed. The "outsider" has therefore become one of the most classic characters and one of the most important keywords in the history of Western literature and philosophy.
What Readers Think
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Community(0)
Official(2)Scraped 4d ago
This is one of my favorite novels, not so much absurd, but closer to showing in a way
If you don't do things according to the rules of society, you will definitely be criticized by this society. What's wrong with it? I'm just different from others.
Rating
Community(0)
Official(2)Scraped 4d ago
This is one of my favorite novels, not so much absurd, but closer to showing in a way
If you don't do things according to the rules of society, you will definitely be criticized by this society. What's wrong with it? I'm just different from others.
