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Albert Camus, marked by his Algerian upbringing under French colonial rule and his involvement in the French Resistance during World War II, possessed a uniquely intimate understanding of failure. The specter of broken promises, lost battles, and the crushing weight of political and personal defeats permeated his life and influenced his philosophy. Witnessing firsthand the absurdity of human conflict and the limitations of grand narratives, Camus grappled with the inevitability of setbacks. His work, therefore, doesn't shy away from failure; rather, it seeks to illuminate how we might confront it, and perhaps even find a strange kind of freedom in its wake.
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"Use this collection whenever you need Albert Camus's lens on Failure."