Saturday, October 26, 2013

I'm No Sociopath

Since we have started discussing The Stranger in class, the term "sociopath" has been thrown around as a possible description of Meursault.  According to the colloquial idea of a sociopath - an emotionless, cold-blooded killer - it would be right.  However, simply based on the evidence from the book and the definition of a sociopath, it is highly unlikely that Meursault is one.

If anything, Meursault is closer to being a psychopath than a sociopath.  If you are to consider sociopathy and psychopathy different disorders (which many experts are no longer doing), then you would find a few subtle differences in the characteristics of those living with the disorders.  Psychopaths tend to be more violent and impulsive, whereas sociopaths are much more calculating and likely to commit a premeditated crime.  In addition, sociopaths tend to be able to maintain normal relationships, although their normality is often superficial.  Thus, Meursault is much more likely to be considered a psychopath than a sociopath because his crime was very violent, impulsive, and not premeditated.

Even so, psychopathy is not a good diagnosis for Meursault.  He would not score high on the Hare Psychopathy Checklist-Revised (PCL-R), the most common analysis of psychopathy.  We simply do not have enough evidence to assess many of the traits on the list at this point in the book.  So, I will quickly look at many of the ones that we can evaluate at this time.
  • Glibness/superficial charm - You could consider his agreement (or lack thereof) and refusal to commit to anything a way of being 'superficially charming.'  This trait could apply to Meursault.
  • Lack of remorse or guilt - His excessive and unnecessary guilt has come up multiple times in the book and in class.  This trait does not apply to Meursault.
  • Shallow affect (genuine emotion is short-lived and egocentric) - His lack of emotion is not the same as shallow affect.  This trait does not apply to him.
  • Callousness, lack of empathy - He has displayed this multiple times, most notably when shooting the Arab.  This trait could apply to Meursault.
  • Need for stimulation/proneness to boredom - He sat and stared at the street he lives on for an entire day.  This does not apply to him.
  • Parasitic lifestyle - He is providing for himself, and was even providing for his Maman for a time.  This does not apply to him.
  • Poor behavioral control - Although he displayed this when killing the Arab, he seems to be very controlled for much of the time, especially when talking to people.  He does not give his opinion, while not rejecting theirs.  The jury is still out on this trait.
  • Impulsiveness - He has displayed this a few times, most notably when killing the Arab.  Often, when psychopaths kill people, it is because they don't like the attitude or look of a person or because the person is breaking some rule that the psychopath has established for themselves.  This sounds sort of like a plausible reason for Meursault's killing of the Arab.  This trait could apply to him.
  • Irresponsibility - He provides for himself, and used to provide for his Maman.  He kept Raymond from shooting the Arab.  At the same time, he killed a guy.  The jury is still out on this one.
  • Promiscuous sexual behavior - Although he and Marie "hit it off" (so to speak) very quickly and many times, Meursault has stayed true to her.  This trait does not apply to him.
In order to be considered a psychopath, Meursault would have to score between a 30 and a 40 on the HCL-R.  I am estimating that he would score less than a 10.  This already pretty much rules psychopathy out as a proper diagnosis of him.  However, there may still be some doubt about why his lack of emotion does not qualify him to be considered a psychopath, so I am going to continue to go a bit more in-depth on the subject.

One of the main reasons that people have been calling Meursault a sociopath is because of his lack of emotion.  As I said before, lack of emotion is not the same as shallow affect.  Psychopaths do have emotion, it is just a smaller range and depth than "regular" people have.  There have been recent studies finding an association between the severity of a person's psychopathy and the abnormality of their brain - particularly in their amygdalae.  (The more severe the psychopathy, the more abnormal.)  These abnormalities cause emotional learning problems, which explains a lot of the issues that psychopaths have with emotions.

Psychopaths are also fascinated by normal displays of emotion.  The classic example is that if a psychopath saw a mother in the street grieving over her child who had just gotten run over by a car, they would a) be captivated by the child's mutilated body, b) not fully understand why the mother was making that face, what emotion it was, and how it was connected to the child's death, and c) go home and try to mimic her expressions.  Psychopaths will try to learn from what they see around them to assimilate themselves with "normal" society.  Thus, when you interact with a psychopath, it is very possible that their emotions will be dramatic, short-lived, and feel fake.

Although he ostensibly pointlessly murdered someone in cold blood, it is unlikely that Meursault could be considered a sociopath or a psychopath.  He scores low on the HCL-R and displays many traits that go against the most basic aspects of psychopathy.  Calling him a psychopath almost feels offensive to psychopaths.  However, I think that this makes him something worse than a psychopath  - something scarier.  His complete lack of emotion and near inability to relate to people almost makes him inhuman.

5 comments:

  1. I don't really like the idea of calling Mersault a "sociopath" or "inhuman." To me, he's a very relatable character with an unusual personal philosophy who ends up taking it too far when he gets involved with Raymond. The murder scene is very complicated and reducing it to just happening because Mersault doesn't have any emotions seems like it's oversimplifying things.

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  2. Meursault seems numbed, but he does mention emotion in the book -- there's joy at the end of the first chapter when he takes the train home, and he mention being happy on the beach and then calls the four shots "knocking four quick times on the door of unhappiness." I feel like Meursault strikes people as either weirdly not relatable or a little too relatable with his calculated approach to things, not displaying much emotion about his mother's death, of course the murder, etc., and so people want to diagnose him with something rather than accept those traits as human (an idea that's arguably scarier than dismissing them as inhuman).

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    1. I agree with that. It was interesting to me how the people involved in Mersault's trial really want him to have feelings, and seem a lot more accepting of a "human" killer than a sociopathic one, whereas the people reading the book seem to be more comfortable with the idea that someone who acts like Mersault has a mental disorder (even though as Ella points out, he doesn't really fit a lot of the criteria). I wonder if this has something to do with us being used to works of fiction where every killer is a psychopath or has multiple personalities, and so we like the idea that it's those kinds of people who kill, not "normal" ones, whereas that sort of behavior might have seemed more alien to someone from longer ago, before those were such common tropes?

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  3. My sense is that clinical terms like this are tossed around in class as a way to roughly approximate something about a character that seems unusual or "wrong" in some way--and "sociopath" stands in for the concept of a person who doesn't display conventional emotional reactions to events. Technically, this does not apply to Meursault, and it's important to note why. I think Adina nails it: it's somehow comforting if we can apply a clinical term to such an elusive and maybe unnerving character, as it makes him "make sense." Meursault is preoccupied with the sense that others don't "understand" him, and psychology offers one potential way to do so--to make his character fit into some established category, to "normalize" him by identifying him as familiarly abnormal.

    But it's much more difficult to simply take him at face value--to not "explain away" his way of being in the world but to take it on its own terms (and think about how orderly and reasonable institutions like the court and jury system LOOK when viewed from his perspective).

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  4. I agree, I don't think that Meursault is a sociopath. While I was reading the passage about his conversation with the judge, who asks him whether he believes in God and he answers no, I remember thinking if he were actually a sociopath he would have done the intelligent thing and lied and said yes. The judge was prepared to let him off, but he ruined it! It also interested me how during the trial it never occurred to him once to lie, to fake some emotions for his mother, or remorse for what he did. He's not the smartest, which to me seems like a very human characteristic.

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