The Stranger
Through the story of an ordinary man unwittingly drawn into a senseless murder on an Algerian beach, Camus explored what he termed "the nakedness of man faced with the absurd." First published in 1946; now in a new translation by Matthew Ward.
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oh my, i didn't know. i didn't know that there was a brand of freedom that felt like this. that it could be so hopeless. i envy meursault. he disappeared, which is what i do all the time by reading and watching a bunch of movies. maybe i'm working too much, but i completely see how absurd the world is the way meursault sees it. "[...] as if familiar paths traced in summer skies could lead as easily to prison as to the sleep of the innocent" (93). everything just is.
i gues... (show more)oh my, i didn't know. i didn't know that there was a brand of freedom that felt like this. that it could be so hopeless. i envy meursault. he disappeared, which is what i do all the time by reading and watching a bunch of movies. maybe i'm working too much, but i completely see how absurd the world is the way meursault sees it. "[...] as if familiar paths traced in summer skies could lead as easily to prison as to the sleep of the innocent" (93). everything just is.
i guess i should explain the story a little. meursault is a clerk and the first part of the story is so elaborately descriptive toward everyday events until one hot day on a beach where meursault kills an arab for seemingly no reason. now i know a lot of people wanna talk about why he killed this man for no reason but i dont care if there is a reason, in fact i hope there is none. it's absurd, and it's supposed to be. after he knocks "four quick times on the door of unhappiness" he goes to trial. this trial is just as absurd as meursault's view of the world and it reinforces the evolution of his disconnect. it may seem hopeless that nothing we do can prevent the inevitable (death) but i think it's comforting. it's almost like god. once this mechanism is realized it's easier to accept and work within its confines. once we realize gravity is near inescapable we can run faster along the ground instead of wasting energy trying to flap our arms like wings. ok that does sound a little depressing, but growing up feels like settling and once that sediment is settled the water is clearer. (show less)Already read
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The simplicity of this novel is but a mirage. The novel uses, as Camus and translator Ward say, an "American method" of writing. Short sentences, bare bones, the type of writing that rarely grips me (only at the hands of the masters: Hemingway and Bukowski come to mind); but here I am anything but distracted--this prose is clear as a blade or gun caught in the glare of a hot Algerian sun.
The depth of the novel is its attraction however, and it all falls (on first reading) in th... (show more)
The simplicity of this novel is but a mirage. The novel uses, as Camus and translator Ward say, an "American method" of writing. Short sentences, bare bones, the type of writing that rarely grips me (only at the hands of the masters: Hemingway and Bukowski come to mind); but here I am anything but distracted--this prose is clear as a blade or gun caught in the glare of a hot Algerian sun.
The depth of the novel is its attraction however, and it all falls (on first reading) in the last handful of pages of hammering thoughts, the anvil being bruised against the last barrage of sound before departure.
The conclusion is an innocence and peacefulness found nowhere else. Honest. Clear. And in a sense, a profound answer to modern man. (show less)
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I remember writing a paper on the nothingness of nothingness or something llike that for French class. It was truly tragic.
Norma Rogers 7 days ago -
Re-reading so I can teach it in my Insane Characters in Literature course next semester.
Facebook User 8 days ago -
what i think about this doesn't really matter, so i won't say anything.
Jeremy Motz about 1 month ago -
Mersault is absurd, and so are you!
Camus attempted to articulate his own absurdist philosophy by writing The Stranger. According to wikipedia (unfortunately, my only source of info about Camus), Camus "defines the human condition as absurd, as the confrontation between man's desire for significance/meaning/clarity and the silent, cold universe." Humans can toil their entire lives over why we are here, what should we do, what gives life real meaning and value, and still, after years of inquiry or meditation, we will not come up with a TRUTH for it all. We will not be able to figure it out. A leap of faith will allow you to BELIEVE something to be true (e.g., God created us on purpose, there's an afterlife or "after party", if you will), but that does not make it true. Science or empiricism will give us more details about how life on this planet functions, but it cannot tell us why or what we should do with ourselves or what gives any of the details any meaning. Yet still, in all this absurdity, for Camus (and for me), "the beauty that people encounter in life makes it worth living." In The Stanger, Mersault has no explanation for the absurd world around him or his own absurd actions. I believe that Camus made Mersault more sociopathic on purpose to emphasize the absurdity of Mersault's actions, which are no more absurd than the world he lives in. Yet, in the end, even Mersault finds happiness in realizing that there is nothing he can do to change this absurdity; nothing he can do to become immortal; no way to re-live life or the beautiful moments he has experienced. This is the acceptance Camus was pointing out to us that is the only LOGICAL choice when faced with an absurd world in which we all MUST die. Mersault gets mad at the priest because he is offering him a "leap of faith" which he knows to be hollow and, in any case, completely unprovable and quite absurd itself. Why would God create an absurd world unless He himself was absurd? God is absurd. All of our lives are absurd. Life itself is absurd and unexplainable. Yet, there is still beauty and life is WORTH living! I'll drink to that!
Facebook User about 1 year ago -
The Stranger
Hi, I'm Alan Nagel and I'm reading this for AP English. I enjoyed the book immensely and found the whole concept very refreshing. However, like many other readers, I felt that everything in the book was like the famous quote in Meursault's trial, "everything is true and nothing is true." So, as might be expected, instead of trying to understand what I did not, I tried to kill it (not that I needed to, any grounding in biopsych or cultural psych puts some fundamental assertions of Satre's to shame). The result was this pseudothesis that I thought might spark some discussion (and me getting my logic owned).
In highlighting the intrinsic interest existentialist's hold in living, and demonstrating the absurdity of societal institutions, Camus has demonstrated, by Meursault's refusal to adhere to absurd norms and his resulting death, the inherent impracticality of the existentialist philosophy.
If you want to tear it apart, that's what it is there for but, please do so nicely (and coherently) if you can.
Alan Nagel about 1 year ago -
cualquier libro te hace libre
leer este libro...es recomendado, para aquellos nerviositos...jajajaja.
Anonymous User about 1 year ago
leanlo no se arrepentiran
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