1. Camus' "The Stranger"
"The Stranger" vividly embodies the existential philosophy's concept of "absurdity"; due to the separation between man and the world, the world for people It is absurd and meaningless, and people are powerless against the absurd world, so they have no hope and are indifferent to everything.
2. "One Hundred Years of Solitude"
is a novel written by Colombian writer García Márquez. It is his masterpiece and a representative work of Latin American magical realism literature. It is known as It is "a masterpiece that reproduces the historical and social picture of Latin America."
3. "The Bald Showgirl"
When "The Bald Showgirl" premiered in Paris in 1950, it aroused people's attention and controversy. The play depicts a boring conversation between a typical British middle-class couple and their friends, another typical British middle-class couple.
4. "Waiting for Godot"
"Waiting for Godot" (Waiting for Godot), also translated as "Waiting for Godot", is the work of Irish modernist playwright Samuel ·Beckett's tragicomedy in two acts, premiered in 1953. "Waiting for Godot" presents a tragedy in which "nothing happens, no one comes, no one goes".
5. "Flanders Highway"
The work "Flanders Road" by French novelist Claude Simon is based on the panic of the French army's retreat after being defeated by the German army in the Flanders region of northern France close to Belgium in the spring of 1940. It mainly describes three cavalrymen and their captains. Painful encounter.
Baidu Encyclopedia-Postmodernism Literature