Existentialism and plague In the mid-1940s, a man named Albert Camry began writing a story. This story is called Lapheste. This novel was written in French, very popular and later translated into multiple languages. This story has been read over and over again, but that is not the only one. This story is a story of a city covered with a fatal illness. This is true, but this is not the content of the novel. The plague can be regarded as a parable to the German occupation of the Second World War in France.
Albert Camus was born in Mondor Algeria in 1913. His family was not educated and his father was murdered at WWI. Albert Camus received a scholarship in 1924 and studied at Algiers' Lycee. Albert Camus was an athlete, but his remaining life suffered for TB. Albert Camus started writing in 1936 and then returned to Europe to return to health. Albert Camus received the Nobel Peace Prize at the age of 44. Albert Camus created The Stranger in 1942, but released it as L 'Etranger. Due to a car accident, Albert Camus died on January 4, 1960. Albert Camus was interested in the existential philosophy after the Second World War. In the book, Stranger Albert Camus's composition style, the selection of scenes and development of roles shows the existence of the theme
More specifically, Albert Camus wrote about existentialism in his novel "Strangers". Camus was born and raised in Algeria in most cases, and later joined the Second World War. During the war, Camu announced his main research on existentialism. Rather, his view was that due to the fact of death human life eventually became meaningless, and the individual was unable to reasonably understand him. Please experience. He later won a worldwide reputation among novelists and essayists and was awarded the Nobel Prize in literature in 1957. Through his writing, Camus became a major moral voice of his generation in the 1950s.