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Notes from Underground

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Title: Notes from Underground


1
Notes from Underground
  • by
  • Fyodor Dostoevsky

2
Existentialism
  • Notes from Underground is considered by many to
    be the world's first existentialist novel.
  • Existentialism is a philosophical movement that
    posits that individuals create the meaning and
    essence of their lives, as opposed to deities or
    authorities creating it for them.
  • Existentialism emerged as a movement in
    twentieth-century literature and philosophy,
    though it had forerunners in earlier centuries.
  • Walter Kaufmann described existentialism as "The
    refusal to belong to any school of thought, the
    repudiation of the adequacy of any body of
    beliefs whatever, and especially of systems, and
    a marked dissatisfaction with traditional
    philosophy as superficial, academic, and remote
    from life".

3
The philosophers Søren Kierkegaard and Friedrich
Nietzsche are considered fundamental to the
existentialist movement, though neither used the
term "existentialism".
  • Existentialism generally postulates that the
    absence of a transcendent force (such as God)
    means that the individual is entirely free, and,
    therefore, ultimately responsible.
  • It is up to humans to create an ethos of personal
    responsibility outside any branded belief system.
  • In existentialist views, personal articulation of
    being is the only way to rise above humanity's
    absurd condition of much suffering and inevitable
    death.

4
Underground and What is to Be Done?
  • What is to be Done? (alternatively translated as
    What Shall we Do?) is a novel written by Nikolai
    Chernyshevsky when he was in Peter and Paul
    Fortress. It was written in response to Fathers
    and Sons by Ivan Turgenev.
  • The novel's hero, named Rakhemtov, became an
    emblem of the philosophical materialism and
    nobility of Russian radicalism. The novel also
    expresses, in one character's dream, a society
    gaining "eternal joy" of an earthly kind. The
    novel has been called "a handbook of radicalism"
    and led to the founding of a Land and Liberty
    society.

5
  • The book is perhaps best known for the responses
    it created than as a novel in its own right. Leo
    Tolstoy wrote a different What is to be Done?
    based on moral responsibility. Fyodor Dostoevsky
    mocked the utilitarianism and utopianism of the
    novel in his Notes from Underground.
  • Vladimir Lenin, however, found it inspiring and
    named a pamphlet for it.
  • Remember that Lenin had also been deeply moved by
    Chekhov's short story Ward No. 6

6
Notes from Underground
Image taken from the poster for the film released
on March 6, 1998
  • The role of man in a world in which the belief of
    God does not exist.
  • In Notes, Dostoevsky shows us the Underground
    Man, (a new type)
  • A despicable and pitiable creature who betrays
    himself and is not even aware of it.
  • The Underground Man becomes a common character
    type in many of the works that followed Notes. He
    is present in Leo Tolstoy's Anna Karenina in the
    milder form of the character Nikolai Levin, in
    Anton Chekhov's Ward No. 6, Ralph Ellison's
    Invisible Man, and in Joseph Heller's Catch-22 as
    Yossarian the 28-year-old Army Air Corps Captain.

7
Written at a time of Great Difficulty for
Dostoevsky
  • His wife was dying
  • His business ventures as an editor of journals
    were failing
  • His own health was in difficulty with more and
    more epileptic fits becoming a major hindrance.
  • In The Underground Man is Dostoevsky attempt as a
    thoroughly anti-modern author to implore his
    fellow Russians to resign from the West and its
    atheistic liberalism

8
What was going on around him?
  • To some extent, the bitterness of the novel is
    traceable to the many personal misfortunes
    Dostoevsky suffered while the novel was being
    written.
  • Much more important was the influence of his
    maturing world-view with its ever colder and more
    distant attitude toward the European liberalism,
    materialism and utopianism of his younger years.
  • Dostoevsky had begun his writing career in the
    1840's as a romantic idealist, even as a dreamer.

9
  • At that time he had devoted a great deal of
    attention to utopian socialism and its vision of
    a perfectly satisfying, perfectly regulated life
    for humankind.
  • This perfection of life was thought to be
    achievable solely through the application of the
    principles of reason and enlightened
    self-interest. In fact, it was maintained that
    given the dominance of the rational and the
    spread of enlightenment, perfection of life must
    necessarily follow.
  • Dostoyevsky is noted for his skill in
    interweaving deep philosophical, psychological
    and theological threads into his brilliant
    fiction.
  • As a result, Notes for Underground is much more
    than stimulating, entertaining stories but is an
    actual representation of 19th century
    intellectual history.

10
  • Notes from Underground wrestles with modern
    existential questions which deal with Man's role
    in a world where the idea of God was being
    rejected more and more.
  • The Enlightenment of the 17th and 18th centuries
    espoused the value of reason, proclaimed the
    potential improvement of Man and Society, and
    freed humanity from superstition.
  • By the 19th century, with the belief in God
    declining, Dostoevsky saw mankind having lost its
    moral bearing, wafting directionless in the
    tempest that is life. Instead of liberating Man
    for the better, the Enlightenment had renounced
    his spiritual connection.
  • Where Dostoevsky saw a creature of God, his
    contemporary philosophers were seeking a new
    definition of modern man, out from under the
    definition of God.
  • The Underground Man is what he sees as their
    final product.

11
Works and Sites Cited
  • Lawall, Sarah. Ed. Fyodor Dostoevsky. The
    Norton Anthology of world Literature Vol. E. New
    York Norton 1301-1306.
  • Marder, Jen, Mike Meyer, and Fred Wyshak
    Dostoevsky's Notes from Underground.
    http//community.middlebury.edu/beyer/courses/pre
    vious/ru351/novels/UGMan/ugman.html 3 April 2008
  • Notes from Underground. Wikipedia the Free
    Encyclopedia. http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Notes_f
    rom_Underground 3 April 2008.
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