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Binding
Hardback
Number of Pages
168
Age Group
All
Language
English
Piracy Free
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Book Summary
Is The World To Go To Pot, Or Am I To Go Without My Tea? I Say That The World May Go To Pot For Me So Long As I Always Get My Tea.’Widely Regarded As A Foundational Work Of Existentialist Literature And A Precursor To The Philosophical Themes That Dominated The 20Th Century, Dostoevsky’S Notes From The Underground Is A Fragmented Monologue By An Unnamed Narrator, Often Referred To As The ‘Underground Man’. A Bitter, Isolated Figure Disillusioned With Society, He Recounts His Sense Of Alienation And His Struggle With The Contradictions Of Human Nature.Written In 1864, The Novella Is Divided Into Two Parts. Its Key Theme Is The Conflict Between Rationality And Free Will. Dostoevsky Critiques The Notion That Human Beings Are Rational Creatures, Arguing That People Often Act Against Their Own Best Interests Simply To Assert Their Freedom. He Suggests That Suffering And Chaos Are Intrinsic To Human Existence, And Any Attempt To Eliminate Them Is Doomed To Fail.Dostoevsky’S Exploration Of The Darker Aspects Of The Human Psyche And The Complexity Of Individual Choice Makes This Work Timeless, Resonating With Readers Who Seek To Understand The Deeper Currents Of Existential Thought. The Novella’S Influence Extends Beyond Literature, Inspiring Philosophers Like Nietzsche, Sartre, And Camus, Who Grappled With Similar Questions About Existence, Morality, And Free Will.
Product Details
Author
Fyodor Dostoevsky
Number of Pages
168
Language
English
ISBN
9789349042582
Reading Age
All
Dimensions
22.9 x 15.3 x 1.6 cm
Binding
Hardback
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Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoyevsky (/Dstjfski, Ds-/; Russian: ; Ipa: [Fdr Mxajlvt Dstjfskj]; 11 November 1821 9 February 1881), Sometimes Transliterated Dostoevsky, Was A Russian Novelist, Short Story Writer, Essayist, Journalist And Philosopher. Dostoyevsky'S Literary Works Explore Human Psychology In The Troubled Political, Social, And Spiritual Atmosphere Of 19Th-Century Russia. Many Of His Works Are Marked By A Preoccupation With Christianity, Explored Through The Prism Of The Individual Confronted With Life'S Hardships And Beauty. He Began Writing In His 20S, And His First Novel, Poor Folk, Was Published In 1846 When He Was 25. His Major Works Include Crime And Punishment (1866), The Idiot (1869), Demons (1872) And The Brothers Karamazov (1880). His Output Consists Of 11 Novels, Three Novellas, 17 Short Novels And Numerous Other Works. Many Literary Critics Rate Him As One Of The Greatest Psychologists In World Literature. His 1864 Novella Notes From Underground Is Considered To Be One Of The First Works Of Existentialist Literature. Born In Moscow In 1821, Dostoyevsky Was Introduced To Literature At An Early Age Through Fairy Tales And Legends, And Through Books By Russian And Foreign Authors. His Mother Died In 1837, When He Was 15, And Around The Same Time He Left School To Enter The Nikolayev Military Engineering Institute. After Graduating, He Worked As An Engineer And Briefly Enjoyed A Lavish Lifestyle, Translating Books To Earn Extra Money. In The Mid-1840S He Wrote His First Novel, Poor Folk, Which Gained Him Entry Into St. Petersburg'S Literary Circles. In The Following Years, Dostoyevsky Worked As A Journalist, Publishing And Editing Several Magazines Of His Own And Later A Writer'S Diary, A Collection Of His Writings. He Began To Travel Around Western Europe And Developed A Gambling Addiction, Which Led To Financial Hardship. For A Time, He Had To Beg For Money, But He Eventually Became One Of The Most Widely Read And Highly Regarded Russian Writers. His Books Have Been Translated Into More Than 170 Languages. Dostoyevsky Influenced A Multitude Of Writers And Philosophers, From Anton Chekhov And Ernest Hemingway To Friedrich Nietzsche And Jean-Paul Sartre. Bio From Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia.