This section contains 197 words (approx. 1 page at 400 words per page) |
Camus's widely known first novel, The Stranger (1942), is about an alienated, aimless young Algerian man who gets caught up in bad company and ends up murdering an Arab. His subsequent imprisonment and trial reflect Camus's view of the absurd nature of life.
Vichy France (revised edition, 2001), by Robert O. Paxton, is a classic study of France under the German occupation in World War II. Paxton shows how the Pétain government pursued a double agenda: an authoritarian and racist revolution at home and an attempt to persuade Hitler to accept this new France as a partner in German-dominated Europe.
Alfred Cobban, in A History of Modern France: 1871-1962 (1965), presents a readable overview of modern French history, including the tragic years of the German occupation and the Vichy government.
Plagues and People (updated edition, 1998), by William H. McNeill, examines the...
This section contains 197 words (approx. 1 page at 400 words per page) |