The Importance Of Morality In The Stranger: The Stranger And Meursault

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Painting a Meursault versus world picture, Camus shows the importance of subjectivity and how the world refuses it. When the judge labels Meursault as “Monsieur Antichrist” (The Stranger, 71), he alienates Meursault from his religion because Meursault is different. The judge continually persuades Meursault to look to God and the light in forceful ways. His anger and despair toward Meursault’s atheism exemplify his frustration towards absurdity. He needs others’ confirmation to justify his own belief, much like society as a whole. Moral conducts and laws exist in a community to be executed; when a member of the group breaks a rule, there are punishments to reinforce the law. In the story, the law and the moral code imposed on Meursault are the …show more content…

He describes how the prosecutor illustrates him, “He said the truth was that I didn’t have a soul and that nothing human, not one of the moral principles that govern men’s hearts was within my reach” (The Stranger, 101). The prosecutor labels Meursault soulless, without ethics and consciousness. The prosecutor neglects the possibility for a different understanding towards the terms ‘soul’ and ‘moral principles’ by defining it under the majority’s value system. Camus expresses his dissatisfaction towards this neglect in his story, “Despite my willingness to understand, I just couldn’t accept such arrogant certainty” (The Stranger, 109). Camus points out that many are not willing to understand subjectivity because if the majority does not agree with it, it is wrong. Meursault may have a different set of principles he follows, but the fact that he is not the same makes him an outcast. However, even though Camus points out such alienation exists, his character Meursault never does anything about it. Meursault continues to sit in court passively observing the trial and even finds it difficult to stay awake; he embraces his subjectivity despite what the objective opinion

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