 La Trangie, The Stranger or The Outsider is a 1942 novel by French author Albert Camus. Though it is a work of fiction, it is often cited as an example of Camus' philosophy of absurdism. The Stranger has had a profound impact on millions of readers. Through the story of an ordinary man unwittingly drawn into his senseless murder on an Algerian beach, Camus explored what he termed the nakedness of man faced with the absurd. Mechsaw, an indifferent French Algerian, is the protagonist of The Stranger, to whom the novel's title refers. The novel begins, Maman died today, or yesterday maybe, I don't know, I got a telegram from the home, mother diseased, funeral tomorrow, faithful yours, that doesn't mean anything. Maybe it was yesterday. Right from the start, we can see Mechsaw's emotional indifference and detached personality, an aspect that is often lost in translation is that he uses the child's word Maman, literally Mami, instead of the more adult mother. Camus wrote in his notebooks that, the curious feeling the son has for his mother constitutes all his sensibility. Mechsaw is asked if he wants to see his mother who is sealed in the coffin, he declines the offer. During the vigil, he drinks coffee and smokes cigarettes next to the coffin, showing his indifference to his mother's death. That night, he happily arrives back in Algiers, the next day he goes to the beach for a swim. There he runs into Maree, his former co-worker. They go to watch a comedy at the movie theater that evening and spend the night together. Throughout the novel, Maree asks him if he loves her, and he simply replies that it didn't mean anything, but probably not. She also asks him if he wants to marry her. He replies indifferently, but says that they can get married if she wants to, so they become engaged. Mechsaw has an encounter with one of his neighbors who curses and beats his mangy dark. One day, he laments that his dark has run away, and can be heard weeping in the night, longing for its return. This strong grief over someone losing his dark contrasts with Mechsaw's indifference at losing his mother. The climax of the novel takes part on a Sunday trip to a beach house. The sun was starting to burn my cheeks, and I could feel drops of sweat gathering in my eyebrows. The sun was the same as it had been the day I buried Mama, and like then, my forehead especially was hurting me, all the veins in it throbbing under the skin. It was this burning which I couldn't stand anymore. That made me move forward. I knew that it was stupid, that I couldn't get the sun off me by stepping forward, but I took a step, one step forward, and this time, without getting up, the Arab drew his knife and held it up to mean the sun. The light shot off the steel, and it was like a long flashing blade cutting at my forehead. My whole being tensed, and I squeezed my hand around the revolver. The trigger gave. I knew I had shattered the harmony of the day, the exceptional silence of a beach where I had been happy. Then I fired four more times at the motionless body, where the bullets lodged without leaving a trace, and it was like knocking four quick times at the door of unhappiness. McSaw kills a man whom he did not know, an involuntary and absurd act. The sun merely struck his knife, sweat was running in his eyes. From this moment, he answers the world of judgement, and the world of judgement is the discovery of man. McSaw is arrested and thrown into jail, his lack of remorse over his crime, and in particular, his lack of grief at his mother's funeral makes people think of him as a complete stranger. In prison, he is tormented by the isolation from nature, women and cigarettes. When I was first imprisoned, the hardest thing was that my thoughts were still those of a free man. For example, I would suddenly have the urge to be on a beach and to walk down the water. He eventually adapts, sharing his mother's attitude that after a while you could get used to anything. In the courtroom, McSaw is seen as a monster, and people believe that the emptiness of his heart threatens to swallow up society. His lack of believing God gives him the nickname Munchaw Antichrist. McSaw is afflicted by the madness of sincerity, distinguished by his never wanting to say more than he feels. When asked if he grieved at his mother's burial, he neither admits nor denies having grieved. It is this tenacious refusal, this fascination with the authenticity of what one is and what one feels that gives meaning to the entire novel. When asked why he had killed the Arab, he says that it was because of the sun. People laugh at him. Eventually, he is found guilty and is sentenced to death by guillotine. This shows one of the forms of the absurd, a young man who wants to live but is condemned to die. While waiting for his execution, he struggles to come to terms with his situation, and he has trouble accepting the certainty and inevitability of his fate. He is visited by the chaplain who tries to make him renounce his atheism and turn to God, but he refuses. Instead, he declares that he is correct in believing in a meaningless, purely physical world. The major themes of the book include the importance of the physical world, the meaninglessness of human life, and the irrationality of the universe. Maxor is far more interested in the physical aspects of the world than in social or emotional aspects. For instance, the heat during the funeral procession causes him far more pain than the thought of burying his mother. The son on the beach tore men's Maxor, and during his trial, he even identifies his suffering under the sun as the reason he killed the Arab. The second theme is the irrationality of the universe, although the notion of the absurd is not mentioned in the novel, it is implicit in it, which is best described as a conflict between the human tendency to seek inherent value and meaning in life, and the human inability to find any in a purposeless, meaningless and irrational universe with the unreasonable silence of the universe response. Trying to define this is like water slipping through one's fingers. However, this world in itself is not absurd. What is absurd is our relationship with the universe, which is irrational. The absurd depends as much on man as on the world. It is all that links them together, thus the universe and the human mind do not each separately cause the absurd, but rather the absurd arises by the contradictory nature of the two existing simultaneously. Camus describes it as a conflict between seeking meaning and the inability to find any in an indifferent universe. The difficulty in accepting this notion drives people to constantly attempt to create a rational structure and meaning in their lives. Society attempts to impose rational explanations for much source irrational actions, as the idea that things happen for no reason or that events have no meaning is disruptive and threatening to society. The courtroom represents society's attempt to manufacture rational order. Trying to offer explanations based on reason for much source unreasonable acts. The entire trial is therefore an example of absurdity, an instance of humankind's futile attempt to impose rationality on an irrational universe. Camus wrote in 1955, I summarized a stranger a long time ago, with a remark I admit was highly paradoxical. In our society, any man who does not weep at his mother's funeral runs the risk of being sentenced to death. I only meant that the hero of my book is condemned because he does not play the game. In absurdism, the only certain thing in life is the inevitability of death and because all humans will eventually meet death, all lives are equally meaningless. McSaw realizes this towards the end of the novel, just as he is indifferent to much of the universe, so is the universe indifferent to him. We are born into a world that was there before and will remain there after we're gone. However, in this seemingly dismal realization, he's able to attain happiness. When he fully comes to terms with the inevitability of death, he understands that it does not matter whether he dies by execution or lives to die a natural death at an old age. Since we're all going to die, it's obvious that when and how don't matter. McSaw starts to truly embrace the idea that human existence holds no greater meaning. He abandons all hope for the future and accepts the gentle indifference of the world. This acceptance makes him feel happy. For the first time, in that night alive with signs and stars, I opened to the gentle indifference of the world, finding it so much like myself, so like a brother, really. I felt that I had been happy and that I was happy again.