
Published in 1947, it tells the story from the point of view of a narrator of a plague sweeping the French Algerian city of Oran.

Kafka’s The Castle and The Trail are also good examples.The Plague ( French: La Peste) is a novel by Albert Camus.


For example, The Metamorphosis by Franz Kafka in which Kafka presents an absurd scenario without explanation or reason–because there isn’t one. Although Camus is best-known for absurdism, there are other writers who also engaged with this philosophical idea. The essay is regarded as one of Camus’ finest works and often ranks alongside The Stranger on lists of his most important literary achievements. The Stranger by Albert Camus Visual Representationĭirectly related to The Stranger is Camus’ best-known philosophical essay, The Myth of Sisyphus. It was published the same year as The Stranger was finished and outlines his beliefs about absurdism and the nature of life. He doesn’t believe that life has meaning nor does he seek to create through relationships. (Kierkegaard vehemently disagreed.) While absurdism might seem at first only tangential to The Stranger it is in fact at the heart of the story. It is only through accepting the absurd that one can experience their own freedom. Camus believed that this last option was the best. One must acknowledge the absurd but continue to live. One takes a “leap” into the unprovable in this scenario. Second, one might turn to religion or spirituality to find a meaning that doesn’t really exist. The first of these is to commit suicide or “escape existence.” It’s an option, neither Camus nor Kierkegaard believed was the right one. Camus believed that human beings have three different ways that they might confront that meaninglessness. Specifically, absurdism that is, the belief that life is essentially meaningless despite the human desire for it not to be. Today, Albert Camus (along with Soren Kierkegaard) is regarded as a leader of the existentialist movement. Antagonist: Raymond, Meursault himself, the nature of life.Climax: The murder of the Arab on the beach.This means that when presented with a choice, Meursault simply acts without worrying about the consequences or how that action might be perceived. Meursault, like Camus, believes in the meaninglessness of life. The story follows Meursault, an unusual man living in Algiers who floats from one part of his life to the next without conviction or too much emotion. Camus was one of the pioneers of this form of philosophy and used it as the guiding principle in the conception and creation of The Stranger. This novel is certainly his best-known work of fiction. The Stranger by Albert Camus is regarded as one of the finest examples of absurdist fiction ever written.
