This book gives a revealing account of the outsider or existentialist. It explains the outsider through their various traits such as freedom, truth, despair and their need to distinguish themselves from the rest of society. It describes the outsider's place within modern life and his or her tenuous relationship with society as a whole.
It shows how many outsiders find themselves stifled at every turn as they try to project their incompatible instincts in contemporary life. The book explains how the lack of any substantive meaning within life and a conventional existence compels the outsiders to view the world as unreal. It removes their incentive to want to be a part of it or to aspire to what it conditions others to define as achievement.
The author argues that it is now more necessary than ever for outsiders to preserve their unique traits and remain true to themselves. He explains how, with the limited scope and opportunities afforded to them to project themselves and influence society, the must pursue more creative means to furnish their existence with meaning.
This book gives a revealing account of the outsider or existentialist. It explains the outsider through their various traits such as freedom, truth, despair and their need to distinguish themselves from the rest of society. It describes the outsider's place within modern life and his or her tenuous relationship with society as a whole.
It shows how many outsiders find themselves stifled at every turn as they try to project their incompatible instincts in contemporary life. The book explains how the lack of any substantive meaning within life and a conventional existence compels the outsiders to view the world as unreal. It removes their incentive to want to be a part of it or to aspire to what it conditions others to define as achievement.
The author argues that it is now more necessary than ever for outsiders to preserve their unique traits and remain true to themselves. He explains how, with the limited scope and opportunities afforded to them to project themselves and influence society, the must pursue more creative means to furnish their existence with meaning.