
Strah i drhtanje
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The Stranger is a novel by French writer and philosopher Albert Camus. Published in 1942, it is one of the most significant novels in twentieth-century French literature and one of the best literary depictions of the absurdity of human existence.
Rüdiger Safranski, known for his works on Schopenhauer, Heidegger, and Goethe, presents an intimate "biography of thought" of Friedrich Nietzsche. The study traces the evolution of his ideas through key events, contradictions, and creative crises.
"The Stranger" (1942) by Albert Camus, a classic work of existentialism, follows the life of Meursault, an emotionally indifferent Algerian of French descent, whose apathetic attitude towards the world leads to tragic consequences.
The Stranger is the novel with which Camus achieved his first great success, influenced by Nietzsche's philosophy, Sartre's philosophy of existentialism, and, most of all, his philosophy of the absurd.