Sunday, August 18, 2019
Jean-Paul Sartre Essay -- Biography Biographies Philosophers Essays
Jean-Paul Sartre      Jean-Paul Sartre was an existentialist philosopher. The questions of his philosophy  often come out in his readings. Existentialism questions why we exist.  Existentialists deny the existence of God. Existentialist writers such as Kafka and  Sartre often use prisons and solitary confinement to tell their stories. Often, neither  the reader nor the protagonist is aware of what crime has been committed.    Jean-Paul Sartreââ¬â¢s ââ¬Å"The Wallâ⬠ reflects his philosophy and personal experiences.  He worked for the French resistance and was imprisoned by the Germans during  WWII. The story takes place during the Spanish Civil War in an old hospital being  used by the Spanish Fascistââ¬â¢s to house prisoners. ââ¬Å"The Wallâ⬠ is told from a first  person, stream of consciousness point-of-view, and uses existentialist philosophy,  to illuminate the follies of totalitarian governments like Fascism, and Nazism.   Like most existentialist writers, Sartre chooses to tell the story of ââ¬Å"The Wallâ⬠ form  the first person stream-of-consciousness point-of-view. We get dialogue from other  characters, but the dialogue is filtered through the mind and thoughts of Pablo. The  terror in the story slowly unfolds from Pabloââ¬â¢s mind. In the beginning, Sartre only  gives us a hint of terror. The reality of the situation has not yet set into Pabloââ¬â¢s  mind:     They pushed us into a big white room and I began to blink because the light hurt  my eyes. Then I saw a table and four men behind the table, civilians, looking over  the papers. They had bunched another group of prisoners in the back and we had  to cross the whole room to join them. There were several I knew and some others  who must have been foreigners. The two in front of me were blond with round  skulls; they looked alike. I supposed they were French. The smaller one kept  hitching up his pants; nerves. (7)     The emphasis on the ââ¬Å"round skullâ⬠ foreshadows a scene that later brings terror into  greater effect. Tom tells Pablo while they are waiting to be executed, that they aim  for the eyes and head to disfigure your face. The emphasis on the perfect round  skulls in the first paragraph draws attention to faces and heads. ââ¬Å"The smaller one  hitching up his nerves,â⬠ tell us from the beginning that Pablo should be nervous  himself. Pablo knows he is in trouble at the beginning. He just does not realize the  amount yet.     ...              ...out truth or a personââ¬â¢s innocence. Juan is  guilty of know crime and is put to death. Garcia who Pablo meets in the courtyard  after he gives his false testimony, ââ¬Å"had nothing to do with politicsâ⬠ (36). When  asked why he was arrested, Garica responds ââ¬Å"They arrest everybody who doesnââ¬â¢t  think the way they doâ⬠(36).     The Naziââ¬â¢s and the Fascistââ¬â¢s used mental torture and the threat of terror to get  people to question their own existence, their own sanity. They do not think, they  just take orders and obey. Therefore, it is perfectly ironic that Pablo sends them to  a place devoid of reason or thought. The further irony is that Gris is hiding in the  graveyard in the gravediggersââ¬â¢ shack and is killed in a gunfight.     Pablo says after learning of Grisââ¬â¢s death, ââ¬Å"everything began to spin and I found  myself siting on the ground: I laughed so hard I criedâ⬠ (37). Pablo laughs until he  cries because he realizes he never will understand why one man dies and another  lives. In spite of all his thinking and mental anguish over the question, every  answer he discovers leads back to Descartes; the only part of his existence he can  not question is the one truth, ââ¬Å"I think, therefore I am."                        
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