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Friday, March 1, 2019

How Do Octavio Paz and Albert Camus Convey Their Respective Views on Death

How do Octavio Paz and Albert Camus convey their several(prenominal) views on expiry? World Literature 1 22/08/2010 some(prenominal) aspects of death are pondered and questioned throughout Octavio Pazs poems, the two I have chosen to particularly focus on are Plain and Near blanket Comorin. Albert Camus has too considered the aspect of death within his novel, The foreigner. The title, The outlander is vital to the text, as it reflects many aspects of the authors life. David Simpson explained that Camus lived almost of his life in various groups and communities without really world of them (iii).This also shows similarities amongst Camus and the protagonist, Meursault, as throughout The Outsider, Meursault stopms to neutralise all his emotions allowing himself to decide his own life as an outsider. However, Camus was born as and brought up to be an outsider, whereas Meursault assumes his detached, individualised life himself. Both Camus and his protagonist share an exist entialist view on death, this is evident in the novel The Outsider. Whereas Paz shows a more positive stance on death.Both Paz and Camus convey the notion that death is an fateful product of life, however they go about this in very different ways. While Camus takes a negative view of death, hauntingly reflected in his protagonists amoral, emotionless attitude towards his death judgment of conviction, Paz juxtaposes images of death and decay, with that of beauty, and personality. Plain is saturated with sexual imagery, however, it is displayed to the lecturer in a grotesque manner, suggesting that life shares an intrinsic link with death.Visceral imagery much(prenominal) as that of decapitated phalluses and a gushing open wound would normally predict towards mortality, but the presence of sexual imagery contrasts this notion as, sexual communion is representative of the fruition of life. Camus presents a similar concept in The Outsider as he articulates the idea that the exclusively certain thing in life is the inevitability of death, and, because all humans will eventually congruous death, all lives are all equally centreless.This theory manifests itself in Meursaults daily response to his own impending death. Whereas during his trial Meursault passively observed the judgements levelled against him, in prison he begins to ponder the fact of his undeniable death. He begins to see his life as having a past, present, and future, and concludes that there is no difference between dying soon by execution and dying decades later of ingrained causes. This revelation comes about when Meursault experiences a sense of liberation in his toss cell.His emotional outburst towards the chaplain, hurling insults at him (124), contrasts hugely against the blunt, nonchalant opening sentence Maman died today. Or yesterday maybe, I cant be positive(predicate) (11). While awaiting his execution, Meursault takes the final step in the development of his consciousness . This capacity for soul-searching is a new development for Meursault, and it contrasts greatly with his level of self-awareness earlier in the novel. This is significant, as it catalyses his self enlightenment, enhancing his mindset into that of an existentialist.Meursaults approach to death, and in fact his replete(p) belief structure points to that of an individual with an amoral stance on life. He is incomplete moral or immoral, he simply does not make the indication between good and bad in his own mind. His encounter with the chaplain presents the reader with a clear binary opposite differentiating between a rational, Christian system of belief and that of Meursault who refuses to succumb to Christianity. Meursault concludes that the universe is, like him, totally extraneous to human life.He decides that peoples lives have no grand meaning or importance, and that their actions, their all overtures and goings, have no effect on the world. This realisation is the closing of all the events of the novel. When Meursault accepts the benign indifference of the universe, (127) he finds peace with himself and with the familiarity round him, and his development as a character is complete. Paz asks similar philosophical questions in Near Cape Comorin using the first person to rhetorically involve Am I a lost soul or a wandering body? In the same poem he uses nature to convey various elements of religion, as it is universally known that people intent for answers in their faiths. Hinduism is alluded to, with references to a troupe of begging monkeys possibly a motion to the Hindu deity Hanuman. This is juxtaposed with references to Christianity such as the cobra from multiplication a binary representation of western versus eastern religion. Nature is also utilize to depict death in Plain when Paz talks of the abuzz of the flies connoting decay.The theme of insects continues as he mentions a statue of a saint mixed blue and pink. From his left eye strea ming grey winged insects that fall turn to dust. This again, savours of death and decay creating in the readers mind, the image of a rotting corpse. This is starkly juxtaposed with the cheery colours of the saint which could themselves represent the gender stereotyped change state given to newborn babies. Lastly, death itself is evoked with the personification by Paz, of a a bird get dressed in black.This is a regularly used symbol of death, and the notion that the bird flies in circles points to the cyclical nature of life and death. This bird, however, may also be used to portray hold as it rests on the only living tree showing hope in the preservation and search of life. This hope is also present in The Outsider because once Meursault dismisses his perceived difference between execution and natural death, he must deal with the concept of hope.Hope only tortures him, because it creates the false illusion that he can change the fact of his death. The leap of hope he feels at th e idea of having another twenty years of life prevents him from making the most of his final days or hours. Hope disturbs his calm and understanding, and prevents him from fully coming to grips with his situation. By using imageries of religion, nature and sex, Paz creates a relatively positive scene on death, in stark opposition to Camus melodramatic, emotionless stance on death.Through Meursaults actions, Camus implicitly challenges societys accepted moral obligations, which state that one should grieve over death, especially for a loved one or family member. Because Meursault does not grieve, society classes him as an outsider, a possible threat, a man with a reprehensible mentality (105) and stands no place within a community (108). Meursaults mindset and possibly that of Camus is transferred to his views on death views which fit into an existentialist way of thinking.Paz also portrays death as an inevitable product of life nd existence, as exemplified by the sinister bird, dr essed in black, flying in monotonous circles, landing on the only living tree presumably as a portent of its certain death. (1,133 words) Bibliography Camus, Albert (1971) LEtranger, (translated from original French to English by Stuart Gilbert,) London Heinemann Educational Books limit Paz, Octavio,. 1979. Selected poems. A bilingual edition. Middlesex Penguin Books Ltd Simpson, David Themes and Ideas iii) The Outsider, The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy, http//www. iep. utm. edu/camus/

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