
What is the meaning of the human condition and how it portrays these two books?
Well and I have to do this reading of the draft summer in which you must read fiction and fiction text, and sometimes at the beginning of the new school year, we have to write an essay that questions connected to this topic Essential: How does literature reflect aspects of the human condition? The two books I read this summer are "Dispatches from the Edge" by Anderson Cooper (Nonfiction) and "The Five People You Meet in Heaven" by Mitch Albom (fiction). So my question is, what is the human condition, and how the human condition is shown in these two books. You do not have to answer both questions or tell me how the state of man is represented in both books. If you can do all that is good and thanks:)
Sorry, I do not know these books, but I studied literature on the human condition. This is really what we makes humans and not animals or anything else, so rather than physical, it tends to be a philosopher. Human beings reflect on their position in the universe and create gods answer the questions we can not respond. It is part of the human condition. How do we react to others, human relations, etc. all add to that. Morality and ethics are part of the human condition. Just think of it as literally being human. How do these novels explore the humanity? The title of "five People You Meet in Heaven "you can say that it is the human condition, because the review is itself part of the sky of the human condition.
Have a Little Faith by Mitch Albom