Theory of the Absurd

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According to critic Mark Esslin, the concept of “Theatre of the Absurd” relates to the “playwrights loosely grouped under the label of the absurd attempt to convey their sense of bewilderment, anxiety, and wonder in the face of an inexplicable universe” (“The Theatre”). Esslin stressed the fact that plays and stories belonging to the “Theatre of the Absurd” were composed of situations dealing with the way a human reacts to an event, without any form of importance, thus only stressing over insignificant things and rejecting the notion of “logic.” Albert Camus, a major writer of the “Theatre of the Absurd”, construes the “Absurd” by completely varying this concept through the human personality, exemplified by The Stranger and “The Myth of Sisyphus.” Camus redefines the absurd by envisioning the “absurd” as a world consisting of “the struggle to find meaning where none exists” (Albert).

In The Stranger, Camus writes about a man named Meursault, who one day is notified that his mother passed away. Shockingly, Meursault does not show any tears of sorrow or grief as the funeral of his own mother. A week later, Meursault develops a romance with the lovely Marie, who, like him, enjoys the beach and swimming in the ocean. On one sunny day, Meursault, shoots and murders an Arab man. He then spends the rest of his time in the court, in order to prove his innocence and thus prevent execution. Throughout the story, Meursault depicts his nature- “a man who will not permit himself to be comforted by the illusions and emotions which ordinary screen men from the cold, bitter stone of their actual condition” (Scott 127).

Throughout The Stranger, the “silence” in the book portrays the themes of this novel. For instance, when Meursault sh...

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...an existence, as exemplified with Meursault and his theory of the inevitable death, and Sisyphus. As noted, The Thinker was created with the initial purpose to portray Dante before the Gates of Hell, pondering his magnificent poem. This brought a resemblance to “The Myth,” for Sisyphus was punished by the lord of Hell.

As Meursault states, "for the first time in years, I had this stupid urge to cry, because I could feel how much all these people hated me" (Camus 90). Through much of the degradation of language through silence and the distinctive word structuring, The Stranger and “The Myth of Sisyphus” deeply portrays just how illogical the world could be, how futile human life is, and how there is no superior being in life beyond a human being. Camus believes that everyone’s absurd condition exists in that nobody is concerned or is willing to help one another.

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