Contemporary Continental Philosophy emerged after World War II, grappling with existential crises and loss of meaning. Key thinkers like Sartre, Beauvoir, Foucault, and Derrida developed influential ideas on existence, power, and language, shaping modern philosophical discourse. This movement drew from German idealism, phenomenology, and Marxism, while engaging with linguistics and psychoanalysis. It explored themes of individual freedom, consciousness, interpretation, and the instability of meaning, influencing fields beyond philosophy like literature, politics, and art.