『The Unbearable Frenchness of Being』のカバーアート

The Unbearable Frenchness of Being

Albert Camus's Expensive Depression for Beginners (Cogito Ergo Nope)

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The Unbearable Frenchness of Being

著者: Sophia Blackwell
ナレーター: Randy F. Thompson
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The Unbearable Frenchness of Being: Albert Camus's Expensive Depression for Beginners
Finally, a philosophy book that admits what we're all thinking: Camus was basically a very attractive man who turned "nothing matters" into a career.

Ever wondered why your college roommate won't shut up about The Stranger? Curious about why French intellectuals spent the 1950s chain-smoking and arguing about whether you should kill yourself? Want to sound smart at dinner parties without actually reading 800 pages of dense existential philosophy?

Welcome to the only Camus guide you'll ever need and the only one honest enough to admit that "imagine Sisyphus happy" is either profound wisdom or the philosophical equivalent of "good vibes only."

Inside, you'll discover:

  • Why Meursault shooting someone because the sun was too bright is apparently literature
  • How Camus wrote 300 pages about plague and somehow made mass death boring
  • The most pretentious friendship breakup in philosophy history (Camus vs. Sartre: now with 100% more formal French pronouns)
  • Why the Mediterranean is the answer to existential dread (spoiler: it's not, but the beaches are nice)
  • How to be an absurd hero in four easy steps (Step 3: Feel superior to everyone who hasn't read Camus)
  • The philosophical question of whether you should kill yourself (fun guy at parties!)

Perfect for:

  • Philosophy students who need to understand Camus but can't stay awake through the actual texts
  • Former philosophy students still traumatized by Being and Nothingness
  • Anyone who's ever pretended to have read The Stranger in its entirety
  • People who enjoy their existential crises with a side of sarcasm
  • Listeners who think "nothing matters" but still want to feel intellectually superior about it

This isn't your professor's philosophy textbook.

©2025 Sophia Anne Blackwell (P)2025 Sophia Anne Blackwell
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