The Stranger The Eye is the window to ones soul. The significance of the eye is that it can display emotions without spoken words. Humans cannot control the inner actions of their eyes because the eyes are apart of the body that moves unintentionally. I chose to draw an abstract art of the eye to help the reader visualize and understand Meursault’s emotions throughout the story. I also chose to use abstract art because it was an art movement that became popular in the 1940s. During this time period, abstract art consisted of multiple different colors and it stood as a method of expression for those who wanted to display their feelings. I also incorporated the usage of numerous lines in my art to represent the main character emotions. The …show more content…
The puzzles in the back represent the visual analysis that the author wants the readers to develop about Meursault’s life. My reasoning behind this is because his life was portrayed as a puzzle and it was hard to understand why he did the things he did and why he acted the way he did. There were specific colors used to represent life and death. The dark lines indicate fear and his nonchalant attitude towards life. I used the color black because it signifies death which was coming Meursault’s way towards the ending of the novel. The green signifies life that was what he came to value after sometime particularly after he was done talking to the chairman. The color yellow represents happiness which was what Meursault felt when he was with Marie and when he went to the beach. The color red represents blood which was there once he had randomly killed one of the Arabs which lead to him having to go to jail. Orange and blue were utilized to represent the sky and the sun that throughout the story we see Meursault talked about often. Overall, the book cover image was created to exhibit and incorporate all the small details of Meursault’s life as described throughout the book for the reader to be able to visualize and
Although books full of words are more efficient in delivering and describing what the author feels, sometimes pictures can give a deep meaning depending on how they are organized. The Veil by Marjane Satrapi’s is a graphic novel that’s organized in a particular way, to deliver a certain message through the pictures. Marjane includes different sizes and frames that serve what she is thinking and feeling. Choosing certain sizes, frames and colours isn’t arbitrary. As each box increases in size, it means that she wants to emphasize the message behind that box, or show her relation to that particular text. Contrast is also one of the main elements that Marjane uses in her graphic novel. For example, on page five, there is a big picture of
I drew the eyes of doctor T.J Eckleburg because it was the most important symbol to me, in the book. And it stood out the most because it was the biggest. The symbol represents the eyes of God/truth. The symbol is represented by two eyes looking over the valley of ashes. The valley of ashes is where the Wilsons live. It seams from any direction you were looking at the eyes the eyes of doctor T.J Eckleburg were directly looking at you. This caused the characters to try to hide what they were doing from other characters, but in the end almost everything that was not told came out in truth. The eyes were not really talked about by the characters. They did not truly have an effect on the characters, because they continued to lie and cheat. The
In some parts of the narrative, Night, Wiesel used eyes to display the hope and positive emotion in characters. In the beginning of the story, eyes were used as an indication of Moche the Beadle’s calmness in the following quote. “I
Everyday men and women die in the most brutal way possible away from their family either killed from gun shots or landmines and they do come back. But in caskets, as images like these emphasize the destruction of war and these snaps just show the side effects of humankind's worse anger being shown. In the Article “The Stranger in the Photo Is Me”, Donald M. Murray expresses how harsh it really was in the war and how it changed himself forever and not in a good way. Not to mention, that he describes the way he felt ready to go to war, maybe even excited, but he wishes that horror on no one “I would not wish for a child or grandchild of mine to undergo the blood test of war” as the sacrifice these men and women go through is undeniably tremendous
His “unlined” face has yet to have the heat of a forge baking the sweat off his face and cracking the skin transitioning him into a man. A man that needs to learn the craft of forgetting the burdens everyday life gives him. The line, “eyes amber as the resin from trees too young to be cut.”(ll 10-11). reinforces that he has to grow and be ‘seasoned’ before he is truly ready to make the transition and tackle the craft of drinking until numb. These lines like an artist waiting to sculpt their stone into something else. The reference of the eyes gives a relation to the difference of her father’s young and hopeful eyes that have not seen what her grandfathers have. This is important as it gives the wisdom and long struggle that separates the apprentice from the master. Eyes have also been described as windows to the soul and the way she relates her father’s eyes as young and translucent that have yet to meet the destructive force that well in her grandfather’s eyes.
Due to the stress and miserable images people in the camps, could only imagine what was next. (Infinitive) “ He closed his eyes as though to escape time” (Wiesel 17). This example can show the bags under their eyes bringing them down to their feet, in time to escape for peace, once and for all! Eye motif can show people how intense the camp was taken seriously in the book Night.
1. On page 109, Meursault says after his death sentence has been pronounced that there "really was something ridiculously out of proportion between the verdict such certainty was based on and the imperturbable march of events from the moment the verdict was announced." How does this comment address the strong need manifested in social and legal institutions to attain certainty about people and events?
Pain is something that few can resist showing, because on some level their survival depends on releasing some anguish. The eyes show all too readily the blunt realities of our world. They do this through more than tears, because some people have seen things so horrible and wretched that they have forgotten how to cry. One has but to look deeper, and the sparkle of his eye will tell a thousand stories far greater than with what the Arabian Nights ever enchanted its audiences.
The Stranger The Stranger exhibits a society that has confined itself with a specific set of social standards that dictate the manner in which people are supposed to act. This ideology determines the level of morality, and how much emphasis should placed on following this certain "ethical" structure. Albert Camus's main character, Meursault, is depicted as a nonconformist that is unwilling to play society's game. Through Meursault's failure to comply with society's values and conform to the norm, he is rejected and also condemned to death by society.
While reading The Stranger I noticed that traits that Albert Camus character depicts in the book are closely related to the theories of Sigmund Freud on moral human behavior. Albert Camus portrays his character of Meursault as a numb, emotionless person that seems to mindlessly play out his role in society, acting in a manner that he sees as the way he’s supposed to act, always living in the moment with his instincts driving him, and if the right circumstance presents itself the primal deep seeded animal will come out. I believe that most of the character’s traits fall under Freud’s notion of the Id and Ego mental apparatus, and don’t believe that his idea of the super-ego is represented in this book.
Albert Camus creates a series of characters in The Stranger whose personality traits and motivations mirror those that are overlooked upon by the average man. Camus develops various characters and scenarios that show true humanity which tends to have been ignored due to the fact of how typical it has become. Camus incorporates abominable personality traits of the characters, variety, consistency, and everyone’s fate.
These eyes, the eyes of Dr. T.J. Eckleburg, represent many things to the characters in this novel. He represents, hope, despair, and God, all while staring
In life there is a constant feeling to want to fit in with everyone else in society, so much that it can cause one to feel like what they have to offer is not good enough. Outside forces often try to mold us to become what they believe is socially and morally correct, and it can make us feel like strangers to these outside forces and even ourselves. This can be said as a result of colonialism in Nigeria where England pushed their culture onto the less powerful nation. It caused a conflict as to who the people believed they should be, educated like the English or like their tribal ancestors. This can prove true for the Nigerian writer, Jude Dibia who demonstrates how he faced the battle between cultures in his story 'Among Strangers'; he felt torn between his fathers Igbo culture, his mothers Igala culture and his own unidentifiable personal culture. It was difficult for him to find a place where he felt comfortable in his own skin, and even into adulthood Dibia was torn, but he eventually found his place and no longer felt like a stranger to the world around him. Jude Dibia is an example of how post colonialism can have an effect on the culture of a land that once existed and he helped to prove it is important to follow one's
Edgar Allen Poe is the genius responsible for dark, twisting, and often uncomfortably wondrous gothic tales, and one of the best is 'The Tell-Tale Heart.' This is a classic tale of a confused man who is so incredibly bothered by his housemate's eye, that he (I am assuming this sexless character is male) thinks the only solution is to resort to cold-blooded murder. Poe incorporates the symbol of the old man's eye in 'The Tell-Tale Heart,' which has both physical and psychological meaning, it also helps to develop the plot and central conflicts in the story. The eye allows a better understanding of the narrator's mental state, represents an omniscient/fatherly figure, and helps illustrate the theme of good verses evil.
It can show fantasy, darkness and it is possible that the old man in the story never existed. It is the capacity of the narrator’s imagination which makes him creates the old man. It all seems that nothing that he says happens in real life. For instance, the old man eyes, heartbeat, the night, the police, and so on, are all fruits of his fantasy. The eyes could represent his psychological sin and guilt, and the old man depicts his own personality. He wants to get rid of the eyes because it has a darkness sin which does not allow him to have a good sanity. The narrator separates the old man’s personality to his eye, and in the end, he assumes by getting rid of the eyes he could still love the man and live in peace with his mental sanity. However, this strategy does not work out well and turned against him because does not only kill the eyes but also the old