Albert Camus' "The Stranger". This essay was about the ultimate conclusion of death to ones life.
Title: Albert Camus' "The Stranger". This essay was about the ultimate conclusion of death to ones life.
Category: /History/European History
Details: Words: 932 | Pages: 3 (approximately 235 words/page)
Albert Camus' "The Stranger". This essay was about the ultimate conclusion of death to ones life.
Category: /History/European History
Details: Words: 932 | Pages: 3 (approximately 235 words/page)
In Camus' The Stranger, the author exposes a tension between society and the protagonist's perspective of society. The reader comes to understand the pointlessness of existence through the protagonist's lens. Although society defines people by actions, Meursault rejects ideas of categorization and embraces a nihilistic view of life. This judgment passed on individuals is based on an individual's actions. Meursault realizes that everything that lives must die, therefore no matter what one does in life,
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only guarantee in life is death. Meursault would die regardless of whether he killed the Arab or not. Meursault has reached the understanding that his life is not affected by his actions; it is only affected by his inevitable death. Meursault justifies his actions with his indifference. Whatever he has done in his life could not save him from his death. Meursault's emotional detachment and disconnect from everyday emotions make him a stranger to humanity.