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Albert Camus

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Albert Camus The Absurd Nonsense ... (Man knows that his condition is without hope) 3. ... Meursault tells the story himself in the first person but objectively with ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Albert Camus


1
Albert Camus
  • The Absurd

2
  • Nonsense of Life
  • A. Fundamental question of philosophy Is life
    worth living?
  • 1. Living is not easy.
  • 2. Man is a creature of habit.
  • 3. Committing suicide happens when man decides
    that. . .
  • a. Daily habits are ridiculous.
  • b. There is no profound reason to live.
  • c. Daily agitation is insane.
  • d. Suffering is useless.

3
  • B. The Feeling of Absurdity
  • 1. Comes from the nausea of mechanical daily
    existence
  • a. Same routine, day after day
  • b. Lassitude leads to the question, Why?
  • c. In a world without sparkle, man is a
    stranger.
  • 2. Is a result of the divorce between man and
    his life.
  • 3. Is revealed by the certainty of death.
  • 4. Comes from believing that each day is subject
  • to tomorrow. Therefore, time is an enemy.
  • 5. Comes when intelligence recognizes that it
    cannot understand the world.
  • The world is irrational.

4
  • C. Definition of the absurd
  • 1. The absurd is neither in the world , nor in
    man, but in their common presence. It is born of
    their apparent contradiction.

5
  • The Absurd Man
  • Camus refuses to condone acts of avoidance like
    suicide which suppress mans conscience and
    doctrines.
  • Camus decides to live only with that which is
    known.

6
  • C. Camas assigns three consequences to the
    absurd.
  • 1. Revolt
  • a. A perpetual confrontation between man
    and his own obscurity.
  • b. It is not an aspiration, but rather, it is
    the absence of hope.
  • c. It gives man a sense of nobility.
  • d. It is the certainty of a crushing fate.

7
  • 2. Freedom
  • a. The absurd man sets aside the problem
    of personal liberty within, because it
    relates to the belief in God.
  • b. The absurd allows man to see things
    from a new perspective.
  • (Man knows that his condition is without
    hope)

8
  • 3. Passion
  • a. Living in an absurd universe consists
    of multiplying intelligible experiences with
    passion.
  • b. Camus insists on the quantity rather
    than the quality.
  • c. Man must be ready to pay for his
    actions.
  • d. Man is his one and only end.

9
  • The Stranger
  • According to Germaine BrĂ©e Camus was unable to
    accept traditional religious interpretations of
    mans universal condemnation. Life itself is the
    cause of this tragic problem.
  • Meursault tells the story himself in the first
    person but objectively with a kind of flat,
    impersonal precision as if he is a stranger to
    the events.

10
  • What do you think of Meursault?
  • - Unresponsive.
  • - Puzzling.
  • - Some what repellent.
  • As we advance in the story, he appears to be
    sincere and honest. He says what he understands
    and feels. He does not wish to hurt others. It
    is only by his lack of sensitivity to the social
    conventions that Camus makes us realize
    Meursaults inability to feel shame and his
    indifference to social conformity.

11
  • Is Meursault a rebel?
  • He is not a man who looks at himself as different
    from other men.
  • Although, he does not know what interests him, he
    knows what does not interest him.
  • Is Meursault proud, arrogant, or dejected?
  • He enjoys the simple pleasure of everyday life.
  • Underneath his apparent indifference, he slowly
    changes until he is filled with passion and
    bitterness.

12
  • What is the unique value of life?
  • Meursaults life must be lived with a passionate
    enjoyment to the fullest.
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