The Stranger written by Albert Camus published in 1942 is a story of a man without any of sense of morality he goes by the name of Meursault. This is Camus’s first novel that he has published and given by the understanding of his character Meursault, he goes into depth of how no one sees the world differently the way he does. Story takes place where Meursault is told that his mother has passed away he goes to the location that he originally put her in for reasons unknown. Meursault was asked if he
The Stranger Book Review Your mother dies and you are left emotionless. The classic novel The Stranger, written by Albert Camus, is about a man, Meursault, who does not show any emotions at all, not even when his mother passes away. It is set the North African country Algeria. It starts with Meursault finding out that his mother has passed away. This is where he goes back for the funeral and decides to stay, and he meets up with old friends from the past. Like his neighbor Raymond who has a girlfriend
In the book, The Stranger by Albert Camus, Meursault finds an old newspaper article in his jail cell about a Czechoslovakian man who is murdered by his mother and sister. This article relates to his own trial by providing himself peace as well as the missing pieces found in both. The Czech man’s story expands the themes mentioned throughout the book, as well as supporting Camus philosophy of the absurd. The story of the Czech man that Meursault found in his jail cell, is vastly different from his
Discussion Questions for The Stranger (1946); translated by Matthew Ward, 1988. Part One Chapter 1. 1. How does Camus set up Meursault's personality -- how does Meursault respond to others' conversation, to ordinary social situations, and to the death of his mother? 2. On page 10, Meursault says that at the viewing of his mother, he felt as if the elderly people there were judging him. Offer a conjecture about why he might have had that feeling. (It is worth paying attention to such references to
Humanity searches for the purpose to their existence. Some turn to religion to find a purpose, while others choose to believe in nothing at all. Albert Camus, the writer of The Stranger, explores the idea of existence through his Theory Of Absurdity. By reading The Stranger there are examples of how Camus explores this Theory Of Absurdity by how the main character Meursault goes about reacting to the many ideas that are present with existence. Understanding the moral background of the main character
Albert Camus creates a series of characters in The Stranger whose personality traits and motivations mirror those that are overlooked by the average man. Camus develops various characters and scenarios that are considered rude and unpleasant, but because it has become common, society accepts it as norms. Camus incorporates atrocious personality traits of the characters, variety, consistency, and everyone’s fate through the creation of the characters. Camus demonstrates the disregarded reason behind
The title of the novel “The Stranger”, written by Albert Camus, connects appropriately to the novel’s main character, Meursault. Meursault is a stranger in this novel, nobody really knows too much about him and his personal life. It seems as if not even his own girlfriend knew much about him. Meursault is more of an observer than a sharing type of person. This can be part of the reason of why he is such a stranger to other people. If someone is a stranger to you it means that you don’t know who
The Stranger by Albert Camus conveys the story of Meursault; this is a man who lives his life each day not believing that there is a Higher Power. The story begins with him finding out that his mother has passed away at the elderly home he sent her to live in. This is where readers begin to discover how apathetic Meursault is about events occurring in his daily life. It is probable that if every person lived his or her life the way Meursault does, with the disbelief that there is a Higher Power,
(a person or group of people) as intrinsically different from and alien to oneself. In other terms, the idea of ‘otherness’ is mainly used for sociologically based analyses of how majority and minority identities are constructed. According to The Stranger by Albert Camus and The Meursault Investigation by Kamel Daoud, both authors inscribe the idea of othering in their pieces of literature unintentionally. The protagonists of both novels come from distinct backgrounds and therefore, we witness a cultural
of the narrator Mersault, and nothing of his eventual demise. The Stranger could have begun with Mersault introducing himself, or with a description of the setting, but instead it began with the following quote: “Maman died today. Or yesterday maybe, I don’t know. I got a telegram from the home: ‘Mother deceased. Funeral tomorrow. Faithfully ours.’ That doesn’t mean anything. Maybe it was yesterday. And that is how The Stranger begins, and Mersault is introduced. This line manages to summarize