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The Absence Of God In Cormac Mccarthy's The Road

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The trees slowly begin to lose their leaves just as they do every fall but this time it's mid July and supposed to be scorching. The trees themselves begin to fall and with them the sunset and sunrise. The days begin to run together in an endless blur of a bleak grey. This mind-numbingly blase world has become home and there is nowhere else to go and nothing can fix it. The end. This is it. The world that was is no more and there is no world to come. Nothing. What would you do? This is exactly what has happened to the main characters within Cormac McCarthy’s The Road. Set in a post-apocalyptic meaningless world McCarthy really emphasizes key aspects of why it happened and how there are real life applications to our present day world. There is no god, no hope, …show more content…
Nothing. Utilizing the encounter with “The Traveler”, McCarthy illuminates the godlessness of existence manifesting itself into the societal void of nothingness.

Lacking a direct connection to god within the scene of “The traveler”, the man turns internally for auspicious guidance and abundant compassion, leaving him downtrodden and continually seeking atonement. In this post-apocalyptic world, a god is seemingly absent and along with him, a sense of inherent purpose. With nothing to turn to, such as a semi-permeable religion, citizens begin to revert to instinctive primal actions and those that don’t, like the main characters, seem to lose all remaining sparse feelings of hope. Page 162 shows this innate desire for a godlike relic when the man is asked by the traveler about what he is and has no response. Nothing. Without a god he is nothing, there is nothing to look forward to only past delicate memories that are surely fading into oblivion. This absence of a bright secure future forces many to search for atonement in different ways and some seem to place this godlike burden upon others. The man exemplifies this when on page 163 he hopes and voices his hidden

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