
Albert Camus's 'The Stranger' (also known as 'The Outsider') is a classic existentialist novel that tells the story of Meursault, an emotionally detached man in French Algiers who is indifferent to societal norms and expectations. His lack of conventional emotional responses, particularly to his mother's death and a subsequent murder, leads to his condemnation. The novel explores themes of absurdism, alienation, and the individual's confrontation with an indifferent universe.
one of the first things that Camu writes along with the the stranger.
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"The speaker mentioned 'The Stranger' as one of Camus's first works, alongside 'The Myth of Sisyphus,' referring to it as the 'difficult first album of the outsider.' This highlights its significance in Camus's early philosophical and literary output."





