Nausea

by

Jean-Paul Sartre

Existence vs. Essence Theme Analysis

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Existence vs. Essence Theme Icon

In his novel Nausea, Sartre makes an argument that becomes a central tenet of his philosophy: Existence precedes essence. In other words, before an object can have an essence (what it is), it has an existence (that it is). Sartre’s thesis is one of the founding principles of Existentialism, a 20th-century philosophy that explores the implications of human existence with a focus on choice and free will. In general, Existentialists like Sartre suggest that humankind’s subjective perception of the world interacts only with its outer layer, essence. When one sees a stone, for example, one sees it as just that—a stone, not the pure “presence” that the stone embodies. If one continues to examine the stone, however, there are more ways to describe it and capture its meaning than one can ever fully realize. In the novel, the protagonist Roquentin’s “Nausea”—the term he uses to describe the sense of discomfort he has suddenly begin to experience—stems from the disintegration of this barrier in his consciousness. He begins to lose his ability to focus on what things are and becomes overwhelmed by the abundance that things are—that is, existence floods his consciousness and displaces essence. Nausea, then, which is presented as a series of Roquentin’s journal entries, follows Roquentin’s struggle to understand this phenomenon and his gradual acceptance of existence, including his own. It first begins when Roquentin begins to feel repulsed by common objects like the stone and the piece of paper. When he goes to touch them, he finds himself subdued by a fear that he can’t name, but which he later comes to associate with the Nausea’s sickening awareness of existence. Soon, Roquentin’s Nausea extends to his own self-perception as he confronts the bare fact of his existence for the first time after years of travel and research. Unable to find any meaning or purpose in his own life, Roquentin is forced to come to terms with his own existence before he can ever hope to achieve essence.

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Existence vs. Essence Quotes in Nausea

Below you will find the important quotes in Nausea related to the theme of Existence vs. Essence.
Chapter 4: Tuesday, 30 January Quotes

There are still about twenty customers left, bachelors, small-time engineers, office employees. They eat hurriedly in boarding-houses which they call their “popotes” and since they need a little luxury, they come here after their meals. They drink a cup of coffee and play poker dice; they make a little noise, an inconsistent noise which doesn’t bother me. In order to exist, they must consort with others.

I am alone, entirely alone. I never speak to anyone, never; I receive nothing, I give nothing.

Related Characters: Antoine Roquentin (speaker), The Self-Taught Man
Page Number: 14
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 7: Friday Quotes

I lean all my weight on the porcelain ledge, I draw my face closer until it touches the mirror. The eyes, nose and mouth disappear: nothing human is left. Brown wrinkles show on each side of the feverish swelled lips, crevices, mole holes. A silky white down covers the great slopes of the cheeks, two hairs protrude from the nostrils: it is a geological embossed map. And, in spite of everything, this lunar world is familiar to me.

I cannot say I recognize the details. But the whole thing gives me an impression of something seen before which stupefies me.

Related Characters: Antoine Roquentin (speaker)
Page Number: 17
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 8: 5.30 Quotes

What has just happened is that the Nausea has disappeared. When the voice was heard in the silence, I felt my body harden and the Nausea vanish. Suddenly: it was almost unbearable to become so hard, so brilliant. At the same time the music was drawn out, dilated, swelled like a waterspout. It filled the room with its metallic transparency, crushing our miserable time against the walls. I am in the music. Globes of fire turn in the mirrors; encircled by rings of smoke, veiling and unveiling the hard smile of light. My glass of beer has shrunk, it seems heaped up on the table, it looks dense and indispensable. I want to pick it up and feel the weight of it, I stretch out my hand . . . God! That is what has changed, my gestures. This movement of my arm has developed like a majestic theme, it has glided along the song of the Negress; I seemed to be dancing.

Related Characters: Antoine Roquentin (speaker)
Page Number: 22
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 13: Sunday Quotes

I am alone, most of the people have gone back home, they are reading the evening paper, listening to the radio. Sunday has left them with a taste of ashes and their thoughts are already turning towards Monday. But for me there is neither Monday nor Sunday: there are days which pass in disorder, and then, sudden lightning like this one.

Nothing has changed and yet everything is different. I can’t describe it; it’s like the Nausea and yet it’s just the opposite: at last an adventure happens to me and when I question myself I see that it happens that I am myself and that I am here; I am the one who splits the night, I am as happy as the hero of a novel.

Related Characters: Antoine Roquentin (speaker)
Page Number: 54
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 20: Friday Quotes

Fog had filled the room: not the real fog, that had gone a long time ago—but the other, the one the streets were still full of, which came out of the walls and pavements. The inconsistency of inanimate objects! […]

I held the book I was reading tightly in my hands: but the most violent sensations went dead. Nothing seemed true; I felt surrounded by cardboard scenery which could quickly be removed. The world was waiting, holding its breath, making itself small—it was waiting for its convulsion, its Nausea, just like M. Achille the other day.

Related Characters: Antoine Roquentin (speaker)
Related Symbols: Fog
Page Number: 76-77
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 22: Afternoon Quotes

Then I realized what separated us: what I thought about him could not reach him; it was psychology, the kind they write about in books. But his judgment went through me like a sword and questioned my very right to exist. And it was true, I had always realized it; I hadn’t the right to exist. I had appeared by chance, I existed like a stone, a plant or a microbe. […]

But for this handsome, faultless man, now dead, for Jean Pacôme, son of the Pacôme of the Défence Nationale, it had been an entirely different matter: the beating of his heart and the mute rumblings of his organs, in his case, assumed the form of rights to be instantly obeyed. For sixty years, without a halt, he had used his right to live. […] He had always done his duty…

Related Characters: Antoine Roquentin (speaker)
Page Number: 84
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 23: Monday Quotes

The thing which was waiting was on the alert, it has pounced on me, it flows through me, I am filled with it. It’s nothing: I am the Thing. Existence, liberated, detached, floods over me: I exist.

I exist. It’s sweet, so sweet, so slow. And light: you’d think it floated all by itself. It stirs. It brushes by me; melts and vanishes.

Related Characters: Antoine Roquentin (speaker)
Page Number: 98
Explanation and Analysis:

Little Lucienne was raped. Strangled. Her body still exists, her flesh bleeding. She no longer exists. […] I am. I am. I exist, I think, therefore I am; I am because I think, why do I think? I don’t want to think any more, I am because I think that I don’t want to be, I think that I… because… ugh! I flee. The criminal has fled, the violated body. She felt this other flesh pushing into her own. I… there I… Raped. A soft, criminal desire to rape catches me from behind, gently behind the ears, the ears race behind me, the red hair, it is red on my head, the wet grass, red grass, is it still I? Hold the paper, existence against existence, things exist one against the other.

Related Characters: Antoine Roquentin (speaker)
Page Number: 100-101
Explanation and Analysis:

He runs, the heart, the heart beats, it’s a holiday, the heart exists, the legs exist, the breath exists, they exist running, breathing, beating, all soft, all gently breathless, leaving me breathless, he says he’s breathless; existence takes my thoughts from behind and gently expands them from behind; someone takes me from behind, they force me to think from behind, therefore to be something, behind me, breathing in light bubbles of existence, he is a bubble of fog and desire, he is pale as death in the glass, Rollebon is dead, Antoine Roquentin is not dead, I’m fainting: he says he would like to faint, he runs, he runs like a ferret, “from behind” from behind from behind, little Lucienne assaulted from behind, violated by existence from behind, he begs for mercy, he is ashamed of begging for mercy, pity, help, help therefore I exist…

Related Characters: Antoine Roquentin (speaker)
Page Number: 102
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 25: Wednesday Quotes

“Perhaps you are a misanthrope?”

I know what this fallacious effort at conciliation hides. He asks little from me: simply to accept a label. But it is a trap: if I consent, the Self-Taught Man wins, I am immediately turned round, reconstituted, overtaken, for humanism takes possession and melts all human attitudes into one. […] He has digested anti-intellectualism, Manicheism, mysticism, pessimism, anarchy and egotism: they are nothing more than stages, unfinished thoughts which find their justification only in him. Misanthropy also has its place in the concert: it is only a dissonance necessary to the harmony of the whole. The misanthrope is a man: therefore the humanist must be misanthropic to a certain extent.

Related Characters: Antoine Roquentin (speaker), The Self-Taught Man (speaker)
Page Number: 118
Explanation and Analysis:

I don’t need to turn around to know they are watching me through the windows: they are watching my back with surprise and disgust; they thought I was like them, that I was a man, and I deceived them. I suddenly lost the appearance of a man and they saw a crab running backwards out of this human room. Now the unmasked intruder has fled: the show goes on.

Related Characters: Antoine Roquentin (speaker)
Related Symbols: Crabs
Page Number: 124
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 26: 6.00 p.m. Quotes

The trees floated. Gushing towards the sky? Or rather a collapse; at any instant I expected to see the tree-trunks shrivel like weary wands, crumple up, fall on the ground in a soft, folded, black heap. They did not want to exist, only they could not help themselves […] Tired and old, they kept on existing, against the grain, simply because they were too weak to die, because death could only come to them from the outside: strains of music alone can proudly carry their own death within themselves like an internal necessity: only they don’t exist. Every existing thing is born without reason, prolongs itself out of weakness and dies by chance.

Related Characters: Antoine Roquentin (speaker)
Related Symbols: Gardens
Page Number: 133
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 31: Tuesday, in Bouville Quotes

What if something were to happen? What if something suddenly started throbbing? Then they would notice it was there and they’d think their hearts were going to burst. Then what good would their dykes, bulwarks, power houses, furnaces and pile drivers be to them? It can happen any time, perhaps right now: the omens are present. For example, the father of a family might go out for a walk, and, across the street, he’ll see something like a red rag, blown towards him by the wind. And when the rag has gotten close to him he’ll see that it is a side of rotten meat, grimy with dust, dragging itself along by crawling, skipping, a piece of writhing flesh rolling in the gutter, spasmodically shooting out spurts of blood. […] Then you will see other people, suddenly plunged into solitude.

Related Characters: Antoine Roquentin (speaker), Anny
Page Number: 159
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 33: One hour later Quotes

Couldn’t I try… Naturally, it wouldn’t be a question of a tune… But couldn’t I, in another medium?... It would have to be a book; I don’t know how to do anything else. But not a history book: history talks about what has existed—an existent can never justify the existence of another existent. My error, I wanted to resuscitate the Marquis de Rollebon. Another type of book. I don’t quite know which kind—but you would have to guess, behind the printed words, behind the pages, at something which would not exist, which would be above existence. A story, for example, something that could never happen, an adventure. It would have to be beautiful and hard as steel and make people ashamed of their existence.

Related Characters: Antoine Roquentin (speaker)
Page Number: 178
Explanation and Analysis: