preview

The Stranger By Albert Camus

Good Essays

The Stranger “The Stranger,” written by the Algerian writer Albert Camus, is a novel about Meursault, a character who’s different and even threatening views on life take him to pay the highest price a person can pay: his life. This was Camus’ first novel written in the early 1940’s, in France, and it reflects the authors belief that there is no meaning in life and it is absurd for humans to try to find it places like religion. The main themes of the novel are irrationality of the universe and the meaningless of human life. During Meursault’s trial after killing the “Arab,” Meursault is questioned for several things that do not seem to have anything to do with the murder to a point where one wonders the actual reason for him to be in trial. Albert Camus professes his ideas on the absurd through Meursault in “the Stranger” to point out how pointless and irrational life actually is. After Meursault helps his friend Raymond to write a deceiving letter for Raymond’s mistress in order to trick her into going back with Raymond so he could take revenge of her spitting of her face and hitting her for “letting him down,” Raymond gets in trouble with the mistresses’ brother. One day on the beach Meursault, Raymond and Masson (a friend) have an encounter with “the Arab” (the mistresses’ brother) which leads Raymond to hand a gun to Meursault which later leads him to murder “the Arab.” During the trial, Meursault is not only accused for the murder of the Arab, but also morally accused

Get Access