The Stranger By Albert Camus Essay

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In Albert Camus's "The Stranger", the absurdity of life from Camus's eyes are put on display through the main character Meursault. The sense that the meaning of life is in the human experiences and that things shouldn't be questioned is the basis of who Meursault truly is as a person. These personality traits reveal that Meursault is a perfect example of an existentialist. From Meursault's strictly physical way of describing the events he comes into contact with, to his lack of feeling and overall withdrawal from everything in his life points towards the characteristics of a perfect existentialist. Even his view on life and death, with the view being that life truly isn't worth living, is a direct portrayal of existentialism. Throughout the …show more content…

This seemingly illogical and at times frustrating way of thinking is what drives the entire novel. Therefore, in "The Stranger", Albert Camus portrays the main character Meursault as the perfect existentialist, demonstrating that life is not only absurd but meaningless as well.
In the novel, Meursault's situations are described in a unique fashion in the sense that there is no emotional attachment to any of it; only the physical aspects of every situation are recorded or thought by Meursault, which shows the depth of his existentialistic personality. Throughout the novel Meursault's physical description of things provide the reader with not only the plot of the story but a deeper look into the absurdness of life that Camus believes in. For instance, upon mourning the death of his mother, whom he refers to as Maman, Meursault takes in the sights of her funeral viewing, such as his the caretaker's apparel being dressed in "black with pin-striped trousers", rather that addressing the fact that his mother is indeed dead (Camus 13). He also describes the stand holding his mother's casket up for the viewing as "walnut-stained planks"(6).The way Meursault seems to

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