Through literature, one can receive many valuable lessons that are continuously thought about and learned from. A piece of literature that continuously challenges me to think and consider the nature of life and death is the novel “The Stranger” by Albert Camus. This novel has received much controversy and criticism, and while many claim that the novel suggests that life meaningless because death is inevitable, I think the opposite. Through the characterization of Meursault, the author claims that life should be lived to the fullest; death can occur at any time and it is necessary to stop looking to find meaning in life and instead live spontaneously. It is not possible to plan the future or create a rational structure, and one must take life
The Analysis of the Stranger, John Wilson in The Secret Lives of Sgt. John Wilson Heroes in literary works were once referred to as the "rebel"; however, the rebel has been replaced by the "stranger" in recent literature. In Lois Simmie's The Secret Lives of Sgt. John Wilson, the novel centers on the title character who is alienated, disaffected and an outsider. The author’s depiction of the central character of Wilson as a stranger engages the reader in a different way, by having the reader want to know more about this mysterious and striking figure.
Death plays a bigger role in life than life itself. When people die, people cry, and while people cry, a clear moment of lucidity occurs. Death is what makes every moment worth living and is told through stories of books and movies with symbols both subtle and blunt. Night, for example, is an autobiographical novel recalling Eliezer’s experience through concentration camps while The Book Thief is a historical fiction film where Liesel is a bystander who participates in activities symbolizing war. History is intertwined death.
For my Stranger Paper I chose Gavin Seymour to stalk as he was only person in the class I've never seen before. Gavin is a sophomore male who portrays himself to be an introvert. He is academically challenged but does not participate in any school sports or extracurricular activities. Gavin is 5’11”, of average weight with a slight bulky muscular build. Being a sophomore, Gavin is most likely 15 years of age.
Jane Goodall was known to have said that “The greatest danger to our future was apathy”. Society has many negative perspectives on apathy, and on people with apathy. However, people often don’t consider the flaws in themselves, that can be considered as a detriment in modern society, which can be seen as extremely hypocritical. Apathy can regard to many aspects in society such as religion, relationships with others, or even not having the societally approved reactions to certain events in one’s life, such as death, anniversaries, and accomplishments. An analysis of literary elements and techniques present in Albert Camus’ novel, The Stranger, displays the idea that an individual’s indifference to religious norms often cause society to have a judgemental view on that person.
What if life contributed to no meaning and the only point which matters is the existence happening during the present? To make things worse, as humans live, they breath, but as they die a salvation is received to their soul, and their existence is over. The Stranger by Albert Camus illustrates that the human soul exists in the world physically, therefore the presence or absence does not contribute to any particular event in life. Through, this thought the novel introduces Meursault, who alienates himself from society. He lacks concern for social conventions and is deprived of the physical bounding from people around him.
In this story, there is the wealthy and poor type of people. One thing they do have in common though is death because everyone will eventually die. This short story, “The Masque of the Red Death” by Edgar Allan Poe, explains how Prince Prospero was trying to avoid a disease that is killing victims very quickly in a very disturbing way. Prince Prospero was one of those people, who wanted to live for eternity. The author’s intended theme was, “Death is unavoidable, no matter how hard you try to hide from it”.
Doctor Strange and Dormammu There are very many different types of super-heroes, some of the very popular ones are Superman, Batman, Iron-Man, and Captain America. There are also many different types of super-villains, such as Lex Luthor, The Joker, Mandarin, and Red-Skull. Those are all very normal heroes and villains, but nobody has ever heard of the weirdest hero and villain in the universe. The hero is Doctor Strange or Sorcerer Supreme, Master of the Mystic Arts, Stephen Sanders, Captain Universe, Vincent Stephens, and the protector of earth from all magical and mystical beings. Doctor Strange’s secret identity is Stephen VIncent Strange.
Embracing Death: A Rhetorical Look at Clendinen’s “The Good Short Life” How does one want to die? That might be a question too harsh for some to think about. So, maybe the correct question would be, how can one embrace death?
Existentialism is a philosophy that invites us to find purpose and meaning in life by thinking independently and acting deliberately, without overt influence from social norms. This philosophy manifests in Albert Camus’s novel The Stranger in the strange character of Meursault, who defies many major social norms throughout the novel. He places no faith in justice or authority figures. He does not pretend to grieve for his dead mother.
In The Stranger by Albert Camus: the protagonist, Meursault, appears to be indifferent to everything throughout the book. Even on fundamentally important concepts such as death, love, and time. Because to Meursault, “we’re all going to die, it’s obvious that when and how doesn’t matter (2.5.114).” This general lack of interest is similar to the Universe because if the grand scheme of things, our lives, and our deaths mean nothing and would have no real impact on the future of the Universe. Our deaths turn meaningless over time, eventually love will fade away, and time will blur together to the point that 100 years will seem like a millisecond.
Ellison admits in his introduction to Invisible Man that his protagonist has a distant relative in Dostoevski’s underground narrator. The influence of Dostoevski and that of a pluralistic literary tradition are translated into a powerful commentary on the marginalized African American experience and, by extension, on human existence in the modern world. The protagonist’s invisibility allows the reader to recognize the peculiar disposition of American society’s eyes. The novel has an existential theme that one may also find in Wright, Sartre, and Camus: Once the invisible man goes underground and loses his identity, he is frustrated in his quest to reaffirm another one. The invisible man’s intelligence and enlightening capability, however, find
One theme in this book is the importance of living life to the fullest. “I wish I would've known that sooner, that I wasn’t supposed to be here forever. That death wasn’t a surprise but an inevitability.” (Pg. 42) Mateo and Rufus both get the call
In his novel The Stranger, Albert Camus creates an emotionally incapable, narcissistic, and, at times, sociopathic character named Meursault to explore and expose his philosophies of Existentialism and Absurdism. Throughout the story Meursault follows a philosophical arc that, while somewhat extreme - from unemotional and passive to detached and reckless to self-reflective - both criticizes the dependent nature of human existence and shows the journey through the absurd that is our world. In the onset of The Stranger, following his mother’s death, Meursault acts with close to utter indifference and detachment. While the rest of “maman’s”(9) loved ones express their overwhelming grief, Meursault remains unphased and, at times, annoyed at their
The themes of death explored using absurdism in The Stranger is shown with a general disregard for death by Meursault and the strange way he sees life based on these existentialist views. The Stranger is a perfect example of an existentialist novel that was written for that time period, as during this time around the area of France and Europe there was an existentialist movement that Albert Camus, the author, was involved in.
French literature of the 1940s was driven by the pessimistic philosophical school of thought, absurdism. Albert Camus’ writings represent a branch of absurdism, existentialism, which questions the inherent meaning of life. In novels such as The Stranger and The Myth of Sisyphus, Camus explores existential tenets, including the immediate pleasures of the physical world versus greater spiritual meaning and what is one’s purpose during one’s life experience. In The Plague, Camus traces the societal reactions to death and disease and the immediate reactions of isolation. In this novel Camus, as a staunch absurdist, uses a contagion as a vehicle to rebuke the two most powerful constructs of belief: the religious and scientific answer to our inevitable