Literature And Existentialism by Jean Paul Sartre
This work presents a sustained defense of literature as a committed, existential act: writers and their characters embody human freedom and bear responsibility for choices, and literary creation must engage with social and political reality rather than retreat into art-for-art’s-sake. Drawing on existentialist concepts such as consciousness, nothingness, and bad faith, it treats the novel and drama as projects that disclose human possibilities, contingency, and the moral stakes of action. The aesthetic is therefore inseparable from ethics—stylistic choices matter because they reveal situations, provoke readers’ consciences, and encourage collective engagement.
The 15678th greatest book of all time
- Published
- Unknown
- Nationality
- French
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- Original Language
- French
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This book is on the following 1 lists:
- Charles R. Johnson's Book Choices from "The Writer's Library" (The Writer's Library: The Authors You Love on the Books That Changed Their Lives (Book))
