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Themes of The Stranger by Albert Camus

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Is there any logical meaning of living? Is life worth living? These are the main questions that Albert Camus attempts to answer throughout the novel The Stranger. Albert Camus is a French-born Algerian who lived through the conflict between the French and the Algerians in the mid 20th century which later erupted into a formal war. Camus won nobel prizes for his writing, which delineates many philosophical ideas. Meursault, the main protagonist of the novel, lives life as a physical being and shows little to no emotions towards events that are happening around him. Camus's ideas that are presented in this novel not only reflect his absurdist and existentialist views, but furthermore it also explores the importance of the physical world and the discriminations happening during this period of time. In the book The Stranger, it shows nothing in the world is as important as the rest, that everything is pointless. Albert Camus, he conveys ideas of happiness and sadness, light and dark, and profound questions about life and death in his books and essays. It was his purpose to analyze that life is meaningless, and humans are the creature doomed to perish. In the beginning of The Stranger, the main protagonist Meursault was an ordinary worker at the shipping company, but he turned to a prisoner who is sentenced to death. Readers might realize that his life is a consecution of absurdity. As the book is written in his perspective, the sense of absurdism is clearly shown by his

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