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Resolving The Dilemma Of The Absurd

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Amir Rezvani Mr. Pyle Period 6 AP Literature and Composition May 1, 2016 Resolving the Dilemma of the Absurd The human tendency to seek meaning in life is invariably at odds with the human inability to find any. How, then, should humans attempt to resolve this dissonance? In The Stranger, Camus addresses this question by developing the character of Meursault, the novel’s narrator and protagonist (and, one could argue, anti-hero) who is sentenced to execution for killing another man. At the start of the novel, Meursault merely feels indifferent about his bland existence and the people and events around him. As the story progresses, however, Meursault transforms into a man who understands the source of that indifference and who is able to not only realize that the world lacks objective meaning, but, even more importantly, live freely in spite of that uncomfortable truth. It is only after accepting his fate and the absurdity of the universe that he attains true freedom and a state of serenity, in contrast with the dejected state of a suicidal nihilist and the anxious plight of an individual searching for nonexistent meaning. Meursault’s philosophical evolution dramatizes the essence of Camus’ contention that in order to surmount the dilemma of the absurd and achieve freedom, one must recognize the objective meaninglessness of life and then proceed to create one’s own personal meaning by living in spite of this absurdity, while recognizing the artificial nature of that

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