Sunday, December 1, 2019
The Plague Essays (986 words) - Absurdist Fiction, Philosophy
  The Plague    The Plague    Camus wrestles with his questions of Existentialism  in The Plague through another character as well: Father Paneloux. With    Paneloux, Camus attempts to reconcile Existentialism and Christianity.    Toward the beginning of the novel, Paneloux is a steadfast Christian. He  proclaims in his first great sermon during the epidemic that the plague  is God-sent, brought upon the evildoers of society to punish them for their  sins. He later involves himself in the struggle against the plague, helping  men such as Rieux and Tarrou, and putting his faith to the test. The test  reaches its utmost when the characters are forced to watch the slow, tortured  death of an innocent child. How could something sent to punish sin afflict  a child? The child had done no wrong, yet the group cannot do more than  to sit and wait helpless as the child dies before them. Shortly after this  event, Paneloux begins to write another sermon. This one differs from the  first. He reflects in his sermon on what he has witnessed. "And, truth  to tell, nothing was more important on earth than a child suffering, the  horror it inspires in us, and the reasons we must find to account for it"  (Beginning of Part 4). Paneloux goes on to explain his reason. "The second  sermon affirms that the plague is not sent by God; it is part of an evil  which is present in the universe and which the Christian must confront"  (Woelfel 109). Although Paneloux attempts to reconcile Christianity with    Existentialism, he nonetheless fails. Paneloux dies. He, as well as symbolically,  his attempt, receive the label which the doctor Rieux records on a card:    "Doubtful case."    Rieux becomes himself one of the first  people in the town to recognize the plague for what it is, and he helps  to lead the fight against it. "Rieux is an authentic rebel in 'fighting  against creation as he found it,' in actively struggling against the injustices  of the human condition" (Woelfel 98-99). Rieux is no ordinary rebel; he  is also a doctor. As a doctor, Rieux's exposure to not only the dangers  of the plague but also to its horrors is more than most must endure. Rieux  faces this in his job before him each day. "In order to make his rounds  and to isolate the people who are infected he has to repress the pity and  sympathy he feels for them" (Cruickshank 110). It may seem then that Rieux  goes against Camus' beliefs on indifference. Rieux's actions can indeed  be seen as self-enforced indifference. For "indifference, properly cultivated,  can be a stoic value" (Parker 5). Rieux cannot afford to show compassion  for each of his patients. He must detach himself in order to perfrom his  duties. "No resource was left him but to tighten the stranglehold on his  feelings and harden his heart protectively" (Camus 172). Yet Rieux does  not keep his feelings locked up within a fortress. After he talks with    Tarrou, he lets himself become more open, more vulnerable. Nothing he could  have done would have made it any easier to bear witness to the death of  an innocent child.    Rieux does not stake a claim to the same  peace that Tarrou seeks. Rieux knows that the fight he fights can never  end. "Rieux knows that the plague bacillus never dies and that the day  would come when 'it would raise up its rats again and send them to die  in a happy city' " (Erickson 84). Riuex, like the plague bacillus, lives  on as the disease slows and the epidemic ends, for the time being, anyhow.    If in The Plague, there is one person  who most represents most people, it is Rambert. Rambert is a journalist.    Rambert finds himself trapped in the city of Oran, trapped with all the  other people. He believes, though, that this is truly not his concern.    He does not belong. He is an outsider. The woman he loves lives beyond  the city walls, and he believes this is where he should be. He spends much  time talking Rieux. And as they talk, he begins to think. He considers  his motivation for leaving the city: personal happiness. "'There's nothing  shameful in preferring happiness.' ' Certainly, but it may be shameful  to be happy by oneself' " (Camus 188). Rambert awakens to the truth which  he had been facing all along . Rambert decides to drop his attempts to  escape: he is part of this people, he is no longer an outsider. They must  all stay together to fight the plague. Rambert gives the fight his best  efforts as    
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