Analysis Of 'The Stranger' By Albert Camus

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In The Stranger by Albert Camus, the narrator, Meursault, has difficulty behaving in a manner deemed “normal” by society. Even though he struggles to feel and communicate different emotions, Meursault has many loyal friends and a keen boss. Meursault sees the world in black and white, refusing to focus on matters outside of his control. When his mother dies, Meursault is expected to show a change in his typical lifestyle. Not only do others expect this change, Meursault expects it in himself. With hearing of his mother’s death, shooting the Arab, and facing his own execution, Meursault expects a fundamental transformation in himself and, because he doesn’t experience it, he seeks to find meaning in death. The Stranger begins with Meursault …show more content…

He had sought a divine judgement when shooting the Arab, but when he was given a judgement in the name of something bigger than himself, he didn’t accept it. Some man was speaking on behalf of an entire population that had no say in his decision, and he was choosing to take away a man’s life. Meursault rejected the judge’s decision to execute him and believed every part of the case “seemed to distract from the seriousness of the decision” (109). Suddenly, when his life was the one in question, whether the judge decided to “either shoot or not shoot” (56) no longer “amounted to the same thing” (57). There are three simple ways to be connected to death: someone you know dies, you kill someone, or you die. Meursault experienced all three possible associations to death, but he never felt the profundity of death until he faced it personally. Death finally held some meaning if it meant he could no longer live. While Meursault struggled with empathy, he quickly felt the absoluteness of death upon hearing his sentence. This time, also, Meursault had uninterrupted days to think about the meaning of death. He eventually concluded that “since we’re all going to die, it’s obvious that when and how don’t matter” (114). Even though he made this conclusion, Meursault still hoped for a miraculous pardon or flaw in the guillotine; therefore, it is clear that he wasn’t fully convinced of his own conclusion. He was about to be stripped of life and was unable to freely live his final days. Meursault finally understood why his father had gone to watch an execution. By watching a man’s life be taken in that way, a person learns to appreciate his or her own time alive. Meursault, to the chaplain’s dismay, refused to believe in life after death, and although he stated that it doesn’t matter when and how a person dies, Meursault lived his final days in a

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