![]() For his crime, Meursault is deemed a threat to society and sentenced to death. He does not cry at his mother’s funeral, does not believe in God, and kills a man he barely knows without any discernible motive. ![]() Published in 1942, the novel tells the story of an emotionally detached, amoral young man named Meursault. The Stranger, Camus’s first novel, is both a brilliantly crafted story and an illustration of Camus’s absurdist world view. Existence seemed simply, to use Camus’s term, absurd. Faced with the horrors of Hitler’s Nazi regime and the unprecedented slaughter of the War, many could no longer accept that human existence had any purpose or discernible meaning. ![]() The experience of World War II led many other intellectuals to similar conclusions. A major component of this philosophy was Camus’s assertion that life has no rational or redeeming meaning. While in wartime Paris, Camus developed his philosophy of the absurd. ![]()
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