Notes from Underground

“Notes from Underground” by Fyodor Dostoyevsky is a novella published by BigfontBooks on July 12, 2024. This edition, written in English and spanning 100 pages, presents the memoirs of a retired government worker in St. Petersburg, known as the Underground Man. The narrative unfolds as a complex monologue that engages the reader in a dialogized manner, reflecting the protagonist’s intense mental conflicts and critiques of modern Russian philosophy, particularly targeting Nikolay Chernyshevsky’s ideas.
Readers will find that the Underground Man’s narration is filled with ideological allusions and explores the political climate of his time. Dostoevsky employs fiction as a means of ideological discourse, challenging prevailing notions such as nihilism and rational egoism. The text serves as a rebellion against determinism, questioning the reduction of human personality and will to mere scientific laws. This edition invites readers to delve into the psychological intricacies and philosophical debates that characterize Dostoevsky’s work.
Official synopsis Publisher
Generally referred to by reviewers as the Underground Man, the novella offers itself as a passage from the memoirs of a retired government worker residing in St. Petersburg, a bitter, solitary, anonymous narrator. Though the initial section of the novella has the shape of a monologue, the narrator’s approach to addressing his reader is somewhat dialogized. Mikhail Bakhtin said in the Underground Man’s confession, “There is not a single monologically strong, undissociated word.” Every word the Underground Man speaks reflects the words of someone with whom he is in an intense mental quarrel. The Underground Man attacks modern Russian philosophy, specifically Nikolay Chernyshevsky’s What Is to Be Done? In a broader sense, the book challenges and rebels against determinism, a theory that reduces everything, including human personality and will, to the laws of nature, science, and mathematics.
The Underground Man’s narration is rife with ideological allusions and complex conversations about the political climate of the time. Using his fiction as a weapon of ideological discourse, Dostoevsky challenges the ideologies of his time, mainly nihilism and rational egoism. The novel rejects the rationalist assumptions that underlie Jeremy Bentham’s utilitarian social philosophy.
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