Only one enemy remained; two if you counted God.
holy...
Mersault is still guilty though
I don't understand what Camus was trying to convey (and I'm familiar with the reasoning of Sisyphus and Other Essays). Portraying a man as trapped in an absurdist charade, when in fact what's happening to him is perfectly sensible, seems redundant. Especially the focus in Meursault's inability to articulate the reasoning behind his actions; it loses relevance when you consider that he'd be judged guilty even without the prosecutor's moral arguments.
>>9433954
Mersault was a whiny little bitch, he deserved to die
>>9433954
I put that through Google and the first result is a Reddit thread: Post your opening sentence.
God has a wicked sense of humor.
>>9435292
That's freakin' awesome, oh wow! That's legitimately hilarious, if that was the first sentence of a book I'd want to read more immediately. Sweet!
>>9435280
Actually the whole point is that a Pied-Noir would never have been prosecuted for killing an arab.
>>9435417
this was what my teacher unironically tried to argue was a central theme of the book. "colonial power structures" or some shit. i was triggered
>>9435489
she's unironically right