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SLE Salon: David Montgomery: UTOPIAS, DYSTOPIAS, AND THEIR DISCONTENTS – THOUGHTS ON DOSTOEVKY’S CRYSTAL PALACES and MOUSE HOLES in NOTES FROM UNDERGROUND

Date
Event Sponsor
Structured Liberal Education
Location
Florence Moore, SLE Lounge
436 Mayfield Ave. Stanford, CA 94305

Join David Montgomery, SLE alum and PhD in Slavic Literatures for a discussion of Doestoevky's Notes from Underground (1864).

The second half of the 19th century is often portrayed as a time of Progress and optimism in European culture.  What then provoked or inspired Russian novelist Fyodor Dostoevsky to create a work of such spectacular spitefulness and gloom as his famous NOTES FROM UNDERGROUND?  Is this a work expressing despair or defiance?  How does the consciousness of the narrator and, even more, the structure of the work represent a commentary and response to Dostoevsky’s (and Russia’s) cultural and literary politics of the time?  How do we read the text as a stand-alone cultural artifact or as a polemic set in a very specific set of historical moments?  (And by the way, speaking more generally of Russian literature – What are “loose, baggy monsters?”) Join us as we address these and other questions.

Open to the public

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