#5: dread and anxiety

15
Some Famous Existentiali sts Søren Kierkegaard (1813-1855) Friedrich Nietzsche (1844-1900) Jean-Paul Sartre (1905- 1980) Albert Camus “A woman is not born…she is created.” de Beauvoir’s most famous text is The Second Sex (1949), which some claim is the basis for current gender studies…

Upload: brooklyn

Post on 24-Feb-2016

35 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

#5: Dread and Anxiety. Anxiety stems from our understanding and recognition of the total freedom of choice that confronts us every moment, and the individual’s confrontation with nothingness. Nihilism is the state of belief in nothing. “When you ain’t got nothin ’, - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: #5: Dread  and Anxiety

Some Famous

Existentialists• Søren Kierkegaard

(1813-1855)• Friedrich

Nietzsche (1844-1900)

• Jean-Paul Sartre (1905-1980)

• Albert Camus (1913-1960)

“A woman is not born…she is

created.”de Beauvoir’s most

famous text is The Second Sex (1949), which some

claim is the basis for current gender studies…

Page 2: #5: Dread  and Anxiety

Nihilism is the state of belief in

nothing“When you ain’t got nothin’,

you got nothing to lose.” (Bob Dylan)

• True nihilist would believe in nothing, have no loyalties, and no purpose other than, perhaps, an impulse to destroy.

Page 3: #5: Dread  and Anxiety

Albert Camus

• The Stranger• A tale of absurdity, death,

and coming to grips with the meaning of one’s existence.

• No single work by any existentialist has reached more people directly

• The Nobel Prize for literature in 1957

Page 4: #5: Dread  and Anxiety

• Born Nov. 7, 1913 in Mondovi, French Algeria

• Father dies in 1914 during World War I, only story Albert knows is that his father became violently ill at a public execution.

• Mother was illiterate, partially deaf, and afflicted with a speech disorder – very poor.

• Attended elementary in a school close to a Muslem community and saw first-hand the idea of the “outsider” he would later develop.

Page 5: #5: Dread  and Anxiety

Significant Events• High school: developed a lifetime love for literature,

theater, and film.• Also enjoyed soccer for sport and the life lessons it

taught him• On January 4, 1960, Camus died tragically in a car

accident.“I learned . . . that a ball never arrives from a direction you expected

it. That helped me later in life, especially in mainland France, where nobody plays straight.”

Page 6: #5: Dread  and Anxiety

• Camus publishes this non-fiction work a year after completing The Stranger. In this retelling of the myth of Sisyphus, he embodies his concept of the Absurd.

• The story concludes with Camus’ pivotal philosophical statement:

• “The struggle itself toward the heights is enough to fill a man’s heart. One must imagine Sisyphus happy.”

• To understand his point, we must understand the themes that his writing explores.

THE MYTH OF SISYPHUS

Page 7: #5: Dread  and Anxiety

Themes of Albert Camus The Absurd Revolt The Outsider Guilt and Innocence Christianity vs. Paganism Individual vs. History and Mass Culture Suicide The Death Penalty

Page 8: #5: Dread  and Anxiety

Camus’ Absurd World

•The world of values is never predictable nor controllable.

Page 9: #5: Dread  and Anxiety

Revolt

“A spirit of opposition against any perceived unfairness, oppression, or indignity in the human condition.”

This idea runs counter to existentialism as it proposes that there is a common good that is more important than one’s destiny. True revolt is performed out of compassion for others.

Page 10: #5: Dread  and Anxiety

The Outsider

“The `stranger’ or the outsider observes everything, even his own behavior, from an outside perspective.”

Camus lived most of his life being in various groups without being of them. This view requires a “zero-degree” objectivity about everything. Camus had this with friends and community.

Page 11: #5: Dread  and Anxiety

Guilt and Innocence Paganism vs. Christianity

There is no clear answer to this in The Stranger. The reader must decide if the character is legally innocent of the murder he is charged with or if he is technically guilty?

It is the struggle between universal guilt (original sin) and universal innocence (pagan primitivism)

Camus respects the Christianity even uses many Christian symbols in his writing, but he maintains Pagan world views. “I continue to believe that this world has no

supernatural meaning . . . But I

know that something in this world has meaning – man.”

Page 12: #5: Dread  and Anxiety

Individual vs. History and Mass Culture

Modern life has an alienating and dehumanizing effect of man. We live in an age that is becoming more impersonal everyday. If anything, modern man lives the drudgery of Sisyphus in meaningless jobs with mind-numbing repetitions.

Page 13: #5: Dread  and Anxiety

Suicide Death Penalty

This, for Camus, is the fundamental issue for moral philosophy as it represents the only possible response to the Absurd. In the end, the morally valid response is to continue living.

Camus opposes the death penalty in all of his writings. He considered it “the most premeditated of murders” because it causes the victim to suffer his death every day until it happens.

Page 14: #5: Dread  and Anxiety

• Although Camus was personally committed to values such as individualism, free choice, inner strength, authenticity, personal responsibility, and self determination, he repeatedly denied that he was an existentialist.

• Although he embraced many of the ideas, he believed that for one to be considered anything one must commit themselves totally to that doctrine, he was unwilling to do this.

EXISTENTIALISM?

Page 15: #5: Dread  and Anxiety