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Monday, March 18, 2019

Essay on Camus’ The Stranger (The Outsider): Apathy -- Camus Stranger

unconcern in The Stranger (Outsider)   Often times an author incorporates a public opinion or philosophy into a die that can shape or reshape the stance emitted from the novel. In Albert Camus, The Stranger, the Existential philosophy that the author fills into the work give an aura of apathy. With the opening lines of Mother died today. Or, maybe, yesterday I cant be sure, Camus immediately hardeneds a tone of indifference (1). Though the protagonist, Mersault, is non on the whole without cares, the overall attitude of passiveness he has toward himself, as well as toward others, give the entire novel a tone of apathy.               With an analyzation of Mersaults character, an automatic attitude of nonchalance is quickly seen. Mersault does not lie to himself, let alone to others, because he has no need to. He does not care about the set laws of society, and he feels that he has no one to please, including himself, which is a reason wherefore he has no qualms about being brutally honest and not hiding his feelings. This is ...

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