Thursday, October 29, 2015

"It doesn't matter" or does it?

One of the largest points that Camus tries to get across is the idea of neutrality and meaningless. Meursault's character is the definition of this point. At face value we see this as being the main point of the article. The argument that “Nothing, nothing mattered and I knew why”. Meursault knows that his life is going to end no matter what. He makes the argument that society will go on just the same as it always has which means individual life has no meaning.

But everybody knows life isn’t worth living. Deep down I knew perfectly well that it doesn’t much matter whether you die at thirty or at seventy, since in either case other men and women will naturally go on living – and for thousands of years. Whether it was now or twenty years from now, I would still be one dying.”

It obvious that on the Meursault is indifferent to the time of his death. I always figured him as one of the people that when asked the question “Do you want to know the exact time of death?” he would answer “I guess, but it doesn’t matter”. The information wouldn’t matter at all to Meursault because he knows it would come anyway. I think we are all a little disturbed by his indifference and neutrality. Having individual thoughts and opinions is part of human nature.  When we see Meursault thinking about his own life we feel uncomfortable that he doesn’t care to preserve it. Or at least that’s what we think at first.

I may be reading a little too far into the book but I like having some sort of logical reason for everything. I like to impose a little more logic that “it just happened” or “it doesn’t matter”. When I read the passage above my attention was drawn to the one right below it.

“At that point, what would disturb my train of thought was the terrifying leap I would feel my heart take at the idea of having twenty more years of life ahead of me. But I simply had to stifle it by imagining what I’d be thinking in twenty years when it would all come down to the same thing anyway”

In the first line we see Meursault have a small realization that his life could have been so much more productive and eventful if he wasn’t in this situation. But then right after this realization he “stifles it”. My panel presentation in class talked about alexithymia, I don’t want to dive into it too much, but the gist of it was Meursault stores all his feelings and emotions behind a wall of no emotion. I think this part where he finally realizes his life could have amounted to something but then “stifles" that thought is a good example of some of those subconscious feelings trying to break through and manifest themselves.


I just don’t like the argument of “nothing matters” and I would rather have some sort of reason to justify all of Meursault’s actions. At the same time that I wish for a reason, I understand that it sort of defeats the entire purpose of the novel. 

7 comments:

  1. Mersault always says that "nothing matters", but it's hard to tell how much he actually believes it. I do think that he stifles his feelings behind the "nothing matters" wall sometimes. At the end of the novel, it's obvious that some things do matter to him. Mersault is irritated by certain things and happy about certain things, which means that these things trigger some emotion response from him, even if it's subtle. So, I think things do matter to Mersault.

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  2. I feel like Meursault isn't able to fully buy into the idea that nothing matters when it comes to his death. He sees himself as being correct logically, and he sort of is; no matter what happens in life he'll die at the end. However, we still see some of his emotion, or weakness as he might see it, when he finds that he wants to keep on living even though it'll just be the same result later according to his philosophy, showing that he still values life and doesn't truly believe that nothing matters.

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  3. Throughout the book Meursault's actions are mostly driven by impulse. From what we see he has the mindset that nothing matters especially his actions. The fact that this is considered absurd to us, explains why you feel the need to explain his actions. I think that there might be more behind his idea that nothing matters, but from the book this seems to be what he thinks. It is just part of the story that Camus weaves and it makes us all uncomfortable.

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  4. Although he puts up the front of indifference, I feel like once he is condemned to death, he succumbs to his need for survival. He wants to escape jail and he wants to live for maybe the first time in his life. Eventually, he accepts his death but his episode in which he reacts violently towards to priest and spends night and day trying to justify hope maybe adds another dimension to his indifference. I feel like he may have only subscribed to the idea that nothing matters because his freedom to be ignorant or indifferent was not being infringed upon. Once he was detained and the court took it upon themselves to control when Meursault died, he felt offended, but in a similar way, he realized that he actually did care about living.

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  5. I agree that as a reader, I often find myself wanting Meursault to be different. But, Meursault's whole situation is due to his indifference. It is what makes him, and the decisions he makes so complex and incomprehensible for me. I think it is hard for us to relate to someone who just seems void of feeling. That it the reason the court couldn't deal with him, no one is able to relate to him. Meursault's indifference is destructive in a society with many people because it can cause those traits to spread, and make chaos for the world.

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  7. While I agree for the vast majority of the book Mersault believes that nothing really matters, I think that when it comes to his own death he does truly care about his will to live. Following Mersault's verdict, he seems to care more and more about different things like when he gets angry at the chaplain for annoying him. Finally when he begins to think of his mother he seems to realize that he does in fact want to live and that life does truly matter, that's how I read it at least.

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