Analysis Of The Stranger By Albert Camus

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In the late 1940s, Europe began to recover from World War II- the deadliest global phenomenon over economic, political, and social thoughts. Adolf Hitler, the invincible leader of the Holocaust, in which the European Jewish population was blamed and executed for Germany’s economic debacles, was a Christian. Although, he honored his manifest Aryan race rather than religion. In other terms, he disregarded his mother’s teachings of Catholicism and believed purebred Aryans were the master race in the world with ideal physical and mental features (qtd. in The Earth and Its Peoples). In The Stranger by Albert Camus-a French philosopher, journalist, author, and Nobel Prize winner of 1957, Meursault struggles to find the meaning of human life while Hitler destroyed humanity. The book covers less than a year’s span in the early 1940s during World War II in Algeria , which was under Nazi, or Axis, control. Scarred by the warfare of Operation Touch, where the Allies (Great Britain and the United States) launched offense, Algerians attempted to resuscitate their country and people. The middle aged protagonist, Meursault, has no ambitions or formidable thoughts on life while he disregards World War II. Camus does not imply why, but Meursault has always isolated himself by living alone on the basic

Samai 2 essentials of life; he never desires for more. Therefore, the war did not affect him to the same extent that it affects others throughout the story.With religion been the driving factor of the Holocaust, he refuses to waste time on any God through the difficult political, economic, and social times.
After the war, countries were in pandemonium and did not know which religion to revere. During this time, the timid Meursault secludes him...

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...ave done in life. His death sentence does not perturb him and he is ready to face the consequences of his mistake. Meursault ‘s convictions remain that life is only physical and emotions should not matter.
The 1940s hosted the turning points of World War II , where Algeria was attacked impetuously by greater powers in Operation Touch. In The Stranger by Albert Camus, Meursault faces life with no religious views even though the society around him has tenacious beliefs. He does what he wants without thinking like Adolf Hitler who persecuted millions because of their religion. The book orates how Meursault disregards feelings and religion and accepts all aspects of life in a realistic and tranquil manner. If he was attacked by Operation Touch before the trip to the beach and murder of the Arab man, Meursault may have found value in his life and ambitions to live.

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