Best Existentialism
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Terrence Malicks magnum opus is a sprawling, impressionistic meditation on life, death, and the nature of existence. By weaving together the story of a 1950s Texas family with the origins of the unive...
Ernest Hemingway's semi-autobiographical novel follows a group of American and British expatriates as they journey from Paris to Pamplona and then to New York City. The New York sections, though brief...
Fyodor Dostoevsky is the preeminent explorer of the human soul in its darkest and most complex states. His novels, such as 'Crime and Punishment' and 'The Brothers Karamazov,' delve deep into themes o...
Natsume Sseki's *Kokoro* (Heart) is a pivotal work of modern Japanese literature, exploring themes of guilt, isolation, and the clash between traditional values and Western influences during the Meiji...
Charlie Kaufman is a modern master of surreal and introspective screenwriting. His films, including Being John Malkovich, Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, and Adaptation, challenge conventional...
Jean-Paul Sartres lecture is the most concise and readable introduction to existentialism. He argues that 'existence precedes essence,' meaning humans are not born with a predetermined purpose but mus...
Andrei Tarkovskys Solaris, a response to Stanley Kubricks 2001: A Space Odyssey, delves into the psychological depths of space exploration. A psychologist is sent to investigate a space station orbiti...
Breakfast of Champions is a groundbreaking metafictional work where Vonnegut directly addresses the reader and inserts himself into the narrative. The story follows the increasingly bizarre experience...
Published in 1940, *For Whom the Bell Tolls* is a sprawling novel set during the Spanish Civil War. It follows Robert Jordan, an American explosives expert, as he joins a guerrilla unit fighting again...
This novella is a profound meditation on mortality and the meaning of life. It follows Ivan Ilyich, a high-court judge, as he confronts his impending death and questions the superficiality of his exis...
Notes from Underground, published in 1864, is a novella considered a foundational work of existentialist literature. Narrated by an unnamed, bitter, and alienated underground man, the work critiques r...
Nietzsche's *Thus Spoke Zarathustra* is a highly influential and often challenging work of philosophical fiction. It introduces key concepts like the Übermensch (Overman), the will to power, and the e...
Paul Schrader is a prolific screenwriter and director known for his gritty, existential screenplays, most notably Taxi Driver and Raging Bull. His work often explores themes of alienation, violence, a...
Published in 1952, *The Old Man and the Sea* tells the story of Santiago, an aging Cuban fisherman struggling to catch a giant marlin. This novella exemplifies Hemingway's minimalist style and explore...
Heidegger's *Being and Time* is a seminal work of 20th-century philosophy, attempting to re-examine the question of Being. It introduces the concept of *Dasein* (being-there), analyzing human existenc...
Franz Kafka is the master of the absurd and the surreal, known for his exploration of alienation, guilt, and the crushing weight of bureaucracy. His works, such as 'The Metamorphosis' and 'The Trial,'...
While originally published in 1949, the 2009 Constance Borde and Sheila Malovany-Chevallier translation of Simone de Beauvoirs 'The Second Sex' is widely considered the definitive 21st-century version...
A stark and philosophical tale of an apathetic protagonist who commits a crime and faces the consequences. It is a seminal work in existential literature, exploring themes of alienation and the absurd...
Dostoevsky's *Crime and Punishment* is a gripping psychological thriller that delves into the mind of a impoverished student who commits murder and grapples with the consequences. The novel explores t...
The Moviegoer by Walker Percy is a philosophical novel that blends the real with the surreal, exploring the protagonist's search for meaning in a post-war America. The novel's lyrical prose and existe...
Simone de Beauvoirs 'The Ethics of Ambiguity' provides the ethical framework for existentialism. She argues that because there is no objective meaning in the world, we must create our own values throu...
Simone de Beauvoirs groundbreaking work is the cornerstone of modern feminist philosophy. She analyzes the historical, social, and philosophical construction of 'woman' as the 'Other' in relation to m...
Charlie Kaufmans I'm Thinking of Ending Things is a surreal, mind-bending drama that defies easy categorization. It follows a young woman on a trip to meet her boyfriends parents at their remote farm,...
Hideaki Anno is best known for creating *Neon Genesis Evangelion*, a groundbreaking series that deconstructed the mecha genre and explored complex psychological themes. His work, including *Kaikai Kit...
Crime and Punishment, published in 1866, follows Rodion Raskolnikov, a destitute former student in St. Petersburg, who commits a murder and grapples with the psychological and moral consequences. The...
The Unbearable Lightness of Being by Milan Kundera is a philosophical novel that blends the real with the surreal, exploring themes of love, freedom, and the burden of existence. The novel's lyrical p...
Ingmar Bergman is the master of existential cinema, exploring the deepest corners of the human psyche with unparalleled depth. His films, such as 'The Seventh Seal' and 'Persona,' are characterized by...
Samuel Beckett fundamentally altered the landscape of 20th-century theater with his minimalist, existentialist masterpieces like 'Waiting for Godot.' By stripping away the conventions of plot and char...
Based on a true story, this Australian thriller follows an undercover cop who forms a bond with a murder suspect to elicit a confession. The film is incredibly tense, relying on the psychological game...
John Updike's 'Rabbit, Run' (1960) is the first novel in the 'Rabbit' series, following the restless and disillusioned Harry 'Rabbit' Angstrom as he abandons his family and embarks on a search for mea...
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