Notes from Underground

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Year: 
1864
Type: 
Public: 
Tags: 
Publisher: 
Vintage
Year of publication: 
1994
Pages: 
136
Moral assessment: 
Type: Literature
Nothing inappropriate.
Some morally inappropriate content.
Contains significant sections contrary to faith or morals.
Contains some lurid passages, or presents a general ideological framework that could confuse those without much Christian formation.
Contains several lurid passages, or presents an ideological framework that is contrary or foreign to Christian values.
Explicitly contradicts Catholic faith or morals, or is directed against the Church and its institutions.
Literary quality: 
Recommendable: 
Transmits values: 
Sexual content: 
Violent content: 
Vulgar or obscene language: 
Ideas that contradict Church teaching: 
The rating of the different categories comes from the opinion of Delibris' collaborators

Notes from Underground can be considered one of the first existentialist works. In this book Dostoyevsky writes about some subjects that he developed more widely in his famous novels Gambler, Crime and Punishment and The Brothers Karamazov. The book is written as the memoirs of a retired civil servant who lives inmersed in himself and locked up in his apartment. He is an educated man, but incapable of being sociable and of having a disinterested friendship. In his reflections he traces some negative tendencies of modern society such as individualism, selfishness and living "to do nothing".

In the first part, he narrates his life and some reflections. In the second part, after visiting a woman with a bad life, he relates the sermon he preached to her to change the situation, arguments that could well have been applied to himself. The book contains, in general, interesting ideas, but they are expressed in a negative and somewhat sad note. Ultimately , it seems clear that only religion can save him, but this is not expressed directly.

 

Author: Jorge Gaspar, Portugal
Update on: Feb 2019