Best Existential Fiction
Novels, novellas, short stories, plays
Ash
362 books
25 friends
25 friends
Lindsay
700 books
51 friends
51 friends
Cody
484 books
56 friends
56 friends
jo
2849 books
365 friends
365 friends
Jennifer (formerly Eccentric Muse)
2596 books
105 friends
105 friends
Jessica
1785 books
1091 friends
1091 friends
Matthew
169 books
13 friends
13 friends
Vivian
100 books
3 friends
3 friends
More voters…
Comments Showing 1-24 of 24 (24 new)
date
newest »

message 1:
by
jo
(new)
Jan 17, 2009 02:40PM

reply
|
flag



Any advice on women in this genre or men who write about the female experience?

Where's the rest of Dostoyevsky? At least The Possessed...

As a general observation, this list is weakened by the fact that the list originator doesn't offer a definition of 'existentialist'. As a result, many of the books listed have only the vaguest connection to existentialism as it is commonly understood.

jo wrote: "i would love a definition of existential fiction, other than fiction-by-existentialist-authors-or-fictions-the-looks-like-the-fiction-of-existentialist-authors!"
Stories of people interacting with their worlds from a experiential stance. Mostly with a 'working out their existence' feel, with emotional responses to angst, death, responsibility, loneliness and connectedness. Basically any story that makes you think of existence.
Stories of people interacting with their worlds from a experiential stance. Mostly with a 'working out their existence' feel, with emotional responses to angst, death, responsibility, loneliness and connectedness. Basically any story that makes you think of existence.

Stories of people intera..."
"Basically any story that makes you think of existence." Way too vague: this could be said of almost any book at all.
Paul wrote: "Eric wrote: "jo wrote: "i would love a definition of existential fiction, other than fiction-by-existentialist-authors-or-fictions-the-looks-like-the-fiction-of-existentialist-authors!"
Stories of ..."
Paul wrote: "Eric wrote: "jo wrote: "i would love a definition of existential fiction, other than fiction-by-existentialist-authors-or-fictions-the-looks-like-the-fiction-of-existentialist-authors!"
Stories of ..."
You're right. Suppose existentialism is an attempt to give life meaning without God.
Stories of ..."
Paul wrote: "Eric wrote: "jo wrote: "i would love a definition of existential fiction, other than fiction-by-existentialist-authors-or-fictions-the-looks-like-the-fiction-of-existentialist-authors!"
Stories of ..."
You're right. Suppose existentialism is an attempt to give life meaning without God.

Or more generally, an investigation of the meaning of life in the absence of authoritative rules and meanings supplied from outside the self. This allows for the possibility that, without God, life is actually 'meaningless', in the common-language sense of the term: any meaning it may seem to have being a provisional one that we have to supply for ourselves.
Another possibility would be to limit it historically: but then people would disagree on what was the first existentialist writing. Do we go back as far as Kierkegaard, or Dostoevsky, or Nietzsche, or Heidegger? Or do we have to wait for the term 'existentialism' to come into common use, with Sartre? And when does it become meaningless to speak of existentialism as a coherent movement? Sartre died in 1980: but many people would say that existentialism's creative period was already long in the past by that point, and essentially limited to the period 1929-1960.
Paul wrote: "Eric wrote: "Paul wrote: "Eric wrote: "jo wrote: "i would love a definition of existential fiction, other than fiction-by-existentialist-authors-or-fictions-the-looks-like-the-fiction-of-existentia..."
no Kierkegaard or Nietzche = no Satre. Philosophy or ways of thinking develop. I would think existential themes are mostly, like all other ideas, found in movies. Like some Coen brother movies. They use a lot of existential themes. It goes deeper than thinking and into feeling. Also, there is a lot of existentialism in therapy, thanks to Rollo May. But as a movement, probably that 1929-1960 mention, I think.
no Kierkegaard or Nietzche = no Satre. Philosophy or ways of thinking develop. I would think existential themes are mostly, like all other ideas, found in movies. Like some Coen brother movies. They use a lot of existential themes. It goes deeper than thinking and into feeling. Also, there is a lot of existentialism in therapy, thanks to Rollo May. But as a movement, probably that 1929-1960 mention, I think.

Also: one very obvious instance of spam. Please don't do this - nobody is fooled.

Related News
Need another excuse to treat yourself to a new book this week? We've got you covered with the buzziest new releases of the day,聽according to聽early...
Anyone can add books to this list.