L'Etranger

L'Etranger

by Albert Camus (Author), Albert Camus (Author), Ray Davison (Editor)

Synopsis

L'Etranger has the force and fascination of myth. The outwardly simple narrative of an office clerk who kills an Arab, 'a cause du soleil', and finds himself condemned to death for moral insensibility becomes, in Camus's hands, a powerful image of modern man's impatience before Christian philosophy and conventional social and sexual values. For this new edition Ray Davison makes use of recent critical analysis of L'Etranger to give a full and concise description of Camus's early philosophy of the Absurd and the ideas and preoccupations from which the novel emerges. Davison also discusses the developing pattern of Camus's notion of the art of the novel, his views on 'classicism', simplicity and ambiguity, his fondness for paradox, and his love of everyday situations which yield to mythical interpretation.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 184
Edition: First Edition
Publisher: Routledge
Published: 17 Nov 1988

ISBN 10: 0415025869
ISBN 13: 9780415025867
Book Overview: Author won Nobel Prize for Literature in 1957