Thursday, January 20, 2011

The Stranger Final Thoughts

Throughout the Stranger I noticed the theme of spirituality and the acceptance of physical, graspable, solid ideas. With Meursault, I feel like his personal search wasn't fully realized until the end of the novel when he killed the Arab and was sentenced to die. After he was sitting in his jail cell for hours and days at a time, he was only able to think about concrete ideas like his memories of Marie and the walls around him. Time had lost its meaning to him, God still had no meaning, and he wanted to live out the time he had left content. As with my big question revolving around life, Meursault was content with his life and his refusal to lie. He was viewed as a stranger by society because he didn't conform to the "white lies" we all tell everyday and he wouldn't elaborate on the truth in court; this made him seem odd and different, because it seemed as if he didn't care for his own fate. He did care about his fate though, which he begins to think of more and more in prison until he snaps and puts his hands around the chaplains neck. After letting all of his steam out he realizes the permanence of his sentence and what he has done. He is comforted by the thought of the people who will view his execution, and the date coming ever closer is another solid idea he is able to grasp. The search for a God has never meant anything to him because he wasn't in need of the comfort faith grants; he found it in other things in life like cigarettes and sex. These ideas seem very strange even to me, but another central idea I found was the prospect of death and the inescapability of it. No matter how an individual lives their life they are going to die, and Meursault understands that fact. That is partially why he is okay with his life being cut short by his actions and the deliberation of his peers. The universe is indifferent to human affairs, and besides supporting life Earth does nothing to affect free will. God hasn't granted free will to Meursault, in his view. Meursault has been excercising the inalienable right to free will his whole life and his indifference to human affairs is what also comforts him in life because he is just like the Earth. It's not that he doesn't care; he just doesn't put too much thought into other people's affairs because what they do is their business. The larger message I would use to apply to my blog topic is this: don't worry too much about other people's affairs because no one will ever be even close to the same you. You are an individual, so do what you want but be prepared to accept the consequences of your actions. Everyone owes a death to the Earth, and if your actions cut that short then so be it. Just don't waste what time you have.

1 comment:

  1. Good point, existentially-speaking, when you speak of not worrying about the business of others. Appropriate for the existentialist since no one can understand "your rock" (in terms of Sisyphus) but you.

    ReplyDelete