Who is celeste in the stranger




















By this point in the book the reader has likely started to wonder if Meursault is himself a robot, going through the motions of life and routine and asking little else but to continue in this pattern.

Yet for Meursault his routine and indifference is a choice and a stop on his progression toward finding meaning in a meaningless universe. His character, though changing little over the course of the novel until the end, is a work in progress and will have the suggestions of more than one dimension. The robot woman intrigues Meursault through her feverish, robotic movement. It is as if she is propelled ahead by some strange motivation which Meursault cannot grasp.

She is so meticulous about her radio program schedule that she appears ridiculous. When she rises from her seat she moves through the crowd with such assurance and speed that she never needs to swerve. The Arab woman Raymond claims is his unfaithful mistress. Raymond 's friend and owner of the beach house that Meursault is visiting when he shoots the Arab.

The man Meursault murders. Raymond 's nemesis and the brother of Raymond's mistress. Meursault 's boss who offers Meursault the opportunity to transfer to Paris and accuses Meursault of lacking all ambition when Meursault declines the offer. The Examining Magistrate. An examining magistrate who attempts, futilely, to help Meursault by Christianizing him. After his efforts fail, he calls Meursault "Monsieur Antichrist. A priest who repeatedly tries to visit Meursault in prison and endeavors unsuccessfully to Christianize Meursault during their one visit.

The Strange Little Woman. She appears at his trial. Meursault 's co-worker, a dispatcher. A friend of Madame Meursault 's. Her crying at the vigil irritates Meursault. A nurse at the old people's home who accompanies the funeral procession and tells Meursault , "There's no way out…".

The head guard at the prison who first makes Meursault realize that the point of prison is to take away a man's freedom. One of the press at Meursault 's trial who explains to Meursault that his trial has been blown up because of the slow press season and because of the subsequent parricide trial.

A policeman who rescues Raymond's mistress from Raymond 's beating and slaps Raymond. The presiding judge at Meursault 's trial. Meursault 's father, known to Meursault only through a story about how he was nauseated by seeing an execution. A nurse at the old people's home who sits vigil over Madame Meursault. The Funeral Director. The magistrate questions Meursault several times after his arrest.

However, by raising the issue, the director implies that perhaps Meursault has done something wrong. When Meursault goes on trial, the director becomes suddenly judgmental. Celeste remains loyal to Meursault during his murder trial. He testifies that Meursault is an honest, decent man, and he states that bad luck led Meursault to kill the Arab. The lawyer who argues against Meursault at the trial. Salamano owns an old dog that suffers from mange, and he frequently curses at and beats his pet.

However, after Salamano loses his dog, he weeps and longs for its return. The crime is apparently motiveless—the Arab has done nothing to Meursault. SparkTeach Teacher's Handbook. Themes Motifs Symbols.



0コメント

  • 1000 / 1000