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Notes From the Underground

ebook

Notes from the Underground (1864) is a short novel by Fyodor Dostoyevsky. Considered perhaps the first existentialist novel, the first anti-hero novel, and Dostoevsky's first great novel, Notes is a prolonged screed by a bitter, isolated narrator, a retired civil servant from St. Petersburg. It was originally published in two parts in January and February of 1864 in Epoch, a Russian journal which Dostoevsky and his brother produced. The first part is a monologue or a diary of sorts, and it features the narrator's attack on Western philosophy. The second part is titled "Apropos of the Wet Snow," which is a narrative of the events which lead up to his alienation from society. Critics are unsure if Dostoevsky was portraying his actual views in Notes from the Underground, or whether it's a satire of the popular philosophies of the day. Certainly the narrator's tone is dreary, and which would match Dostoevsky's life at the time: he was financially ruined, his literary reputation was falling apart, and his wife was on her deathbed. Whatever the reality, the narrator, often called the Underground Man, has influenced literary characters and philosophy ever since the book's publication. Both Nietzsche and Sartre cite it as a brilliant book. And Ellison's The Invisible Man, Wright's The Man Who Lived Underground, Heller's Catch-22, and Bret Easton Ellis's American Psycho all owe direct debt to Dostoevsky's work.


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Publisher: Sheba Blake Publishing

OverDrive Read

  • ISBN: 9781304391445
  • Release date: October 11, 2013

EPUB ebook

  • ISBN: 9781304391445
  • File size: 156 KB
  • Release date: December 17, 2013

Formats

OverDrive Read
EPUB ebook

subjects

Fiction Literature

Languages

English

Notes from the Underground (1864) is a short novel by Fyodor Dostoyevsky. Considered perhaps the first existentialist novel, the first anti-hero novel, and Dostoevsky's first great novel, Notes is a prolonged screed by a bitter, isolated narrator, a retired civil servant from St. Petersburg. It was originally published in two parts in January and February of 1864 in Epoch, a Russian journal which Dostoevsky and his brother produced. The first part is a monologue or a diary of sorts, and it features the narrator's attack on Western philosophy. The second part is titled "Apropos of the Wet Snow," which is a narrative of the events which lead up to his alienation from society. Critics are unsure if Dostoevsky was portraying his actual views in Notes from the Underground, or whether it's a satire of the popular philosophies of the day. Certainly the narrator's tone is dreary, and which would match Dostoevsky's life at the time: he was financially ruined, his literary reputation was falling apart, and his wife was on her deathbed. Whatever the reality, the narrator, often called the Underground Man, has influenced literary characters and philosophy ever since the book's publication. Both Nietzsche and Sartre cite it as a brilliant book. And Ellison's The Invisible Man, Wright's The Man Who Lived Underground, Heller's Catch-22, and Bret Easton Ellis's American Psycho all owe direct debt to Dostoevsky's work.


Expand title description text