"Albert Camus's The Stranger: Audio Reading"
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 21 พ.ย. 2023
- "Listen to a captivating audio reading of Albert Camus's renowned novel 'The Stranger.' Immerse yourself in the existential journey of Meursault, the unconventional protagonist whose detachment from societal norms challenges our perception of existence. Explore themes of absurdity, alienation, and the human condition through this evocative narration. Join us in experiencing the depth and philosophical essence of Camus's literary masterpiece."
Part 1
Chapter 1: 0:00
Chapter 2: 27:30
Chapter 3: 37:44
Chapter 4: 53:48
Part 2
Chapter 1: 1:37:07
Chapter 2: 1:52:05
Chapter 3: 2:09:07
Reader is excellent. Liked the translator's talk on the sensibility behind the character: "Mama died today." Knew nothing of Jean Paul Sartre mentioning this.
Look at my lawyer dog 😢 im getting beheaded 😭
Thank you for posting.
You bet!
Chapter 1: 0:00
Chapter 2: 27:30
Chapter 3: 37:44
Chapter 4: 53:48 *
Part 2
Chapter 1: 1:37:07
Chapter 2: 1:52:05
Chapter 3: 2:09:07
so how many pages & chapters are in the book
@@hanaahmchelleI believe the paperback English translation version has 124 pages
Definitely on the spectrum
You definitely are!!
the spectrum is meaningless.
i thought so too at first. i maybe still think so a bit, but i also dont think that its the main point of the story. the style is blunt and short sentences, but its more about what’s not being said. the narrator is not overly reactive to the emotions of others, but in a philosophical, detached way that a neurotypical person could pick up. the sun is bright and overwhelming in an over stimulating way, but also is a metaphor for the cruelness of the world (on this note specifically there are some interesting connections camus had with other philosophers at the time that are worth looking into.)
but of course, like any great and classic literature, there are so many ways you can take it, so many theses to be made from it.
but of course, absolutely feel free to take all of this with the grain of salt in the size that feels right to you. i am young (19), never been to college, struggled through school and frankly somewhat pretentious but at the same time, i feel i am fairly well read and deeply enjoy philosophical discussion. so make of that what you will. all of this to say, i find many of the signs of autism to be more universally signs of alienation worth diving deeper into than “oh, he’s just autistic.”
Great reader
Thx
Welcome!
1:57:07 BOOK MARK
57:00 ok the police one is just comedy
Chapter 6 1:14:28
You have such a great voice for audio!!!
Which translation do you have?
This was probably done in the 50’s
❤
is this the entire book and no abridged version?
Yes
I'm 14 and after just reading this for school I now act like camus. I wear sunglasses at school and shrug at everything in a laidback manner. Nothing matters we all die in the end anyway so why worry. Everyone thinks I'm so cool, I am.
ur so cool
🐺
U cannot be fucking serious get a grip 😂
sigma
Your coolness is all a self delusion
Chapter 5: 1:03:34
Excellent reading...!!!
i am literally meursault
Chapter Five 1:03:36
Where do u find the book for free
I don;t remember where I found this one.
Try a Google search, 'The Stranger Camus free pdf.' That works for a lot of stuff. I have a copy from this method.
Thiscwork might be on Project Gutenberg (Google), too!
Try searching on Google, 'The Outsider Camus free pdf.'
2:09:08
raymond x meursault yaoi
Life is meaningless. Yes, Im an absurdist.
Are you going to live by that? Camus believes that there is no meaning to anything. He believes everything is a dirty trick played on you by nature. Equality, human rights, justice, it’s all just some dirty trick huh?
Why don’t you start killing people if nothing matters and life is meaningless? Why not rape? Why not steal? Why not litter? Start to live up to your own philosophy. That justification for not doing these things is your sense of right and wrong good and evil. Camus would say you shouldn’t have these morals, and it’s a lie. Is it a lie to you? Truly?
thanks for sharing
27:28
2 50 00
This felt like it was read by Camus himself