Exploring Relationships in Albert Camus' 'The Stranger'

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As humans, we create relationships with the people we meet. There are many different types of relationships which help us create feelings, emotions, and memories with the other people. An acquaintance can become something else like a best friend, boyfriend, girlfriend, or a parent. While in any relationship, a person can learn many things that will shape their morals and their beliefs on defining a relationship. Most of the time, a close relationship involves loyalty, honesty, affection, and a deep connection. In The Stranger, by Albert Camus, the main character Meursault encounters many people in his life, but he does not sustain a strong bond with any of them nor does he feel dutiful towards them. Camus carries this theme out through Meursault’s …show more content…

Meursault does not mourn terribly about his loss, and Camus depicts this through Meursault’s language. In the first chapter, he takes the time to describe his system of getting to the funeral instead of expressing his grief for his mother. When he receives the telegram from the home, after reading it, he states “that doesn’t mean anything. Maybe it was yesterday”(3). He is impassive by the known fact, and his response is not connected to the actual death of his mother, it is about when the death has probably taken place. He seems restrained and states that “it’s almost as if Maman weren’t dead”; however, he continues to state that “after the funeral, though, the case will be closed, and everything will have a more official feel to it” (3). Simply hearing the news of his mother is not enough for him to feel sorrow, he believes that after the events have been taken place, he might then feel mournful. However, after the funeral “[he] felt like having a smoke…[so he] offered the caretaker a cigarette and [they] smoked”(8). The language that Camus utilizes for Meursault is very unemotional, because while present in a funeral Meursault decides to smoke and he does not think anything of it. Furthermore, Meursault is reacting to this situation very robotically, without any specific feeling or emotion, he just responds as the situation

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