05/21/2014
Monika Greenleaf on Dostoevsky and The Brothers Karamazov
Monika Greenleaf is a comparative literature scholar who teaches in the Department of Slavic and the Department of Comparative Literature here at Stanford. She is of Polish extraction herself and specializes in Polish and Russian literature. She is the author of Pushkin and Romantic Fashion as well as editor of Russian Subjects: Nation, Empire, and […]
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This is KZSU Stanford.
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Welcome to entitled opinions.
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My name is Robert Harrison.
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And we're coming to you from the Stanford campus.
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I stagger into the studios of KZSU today like a battered goat, an abused dog,
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a tormented inmate, a bewildered witness of something strange and disturbing.
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That's right, I've been rereading Dostoyevsky friends, in particular, the brothers kara Madsov.
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And my nerves are shattered by this cast of characters.
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Almost all of them deeply flawed, afflicted, and fascinating.
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They don't call it a Russian novel for nothing.
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The meek and the mild need not apply to read this book.
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I realize now why most of us take on Dostoyevsky when we're young.
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You need the resilience and vigor of youth to venture into this whirlpool of passions,
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paradoxes and pathologies.
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But also into ice cold underground waters of human psychology that reach the most remote recesses of self-laceration and self-deception.
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To say nothing of the remorseless clinical analyses of good and evil, of the existence of God, and our basic human need for miracle, mystery, and authority.
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That is no country for old men, for sure.
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Never wake up in a good mood again.
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Take a seat, everyone. We have a show on Dostoyevsky for you today.
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The brothers k, coming your way from the rumbling studios of KZSU, home of entitled opinions.
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I am extremely happy to be back on air today with my friend and colleague Monika Greenleaf, professor of Slavic's here at Stanford.
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The last time we did a show together was in the very first year of our broadcast. It was on Vladimir Nabokov, one of my all-time favorite episodes of entitled opinions.
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Today Monika joins me to talk about the great Fjord Dostoyevsky, and in particular his novel, The Brothers Karamadzov. Monika, welcome to the program.
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It's wonderful to be here. I really enjoyed doing the Lolita broadcast and I got many responses to it.
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You'll probably get equally as many this time, if not more, I'm sure. Now I'm not going to pretend that I re-read the whole novel for this show, the Brothers K, that's impossible, but I have read that novel several times when I was young.
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But this time around when I revisited various chapters in particular, the Grand Inquisitor, it struck me just how much Dostoyevsky comes across as a visionary of sorts. It's as if the tragic history of Russia in the 20th century, at least for my point of view, a tragic history, especially as political history, has been largely foreseen or had been largely foreseen by him in this and some of his other novels.
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Do you find that Dostoyevsky still remains relevant pertinent and insightful for all of us, but especially for our fellow men and women over in Russia, which is going through another dramatic phase of its novelistic history?
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Yes, I actually think that Dostoyevsky is always pertinent, as you said, he's really pertinent for all young people, high school students, undergraduate. I was bemused though when you said that it's no country for old men and will we ever wake up in a good mood again after reading Dostoyevsky, because that's in a way the kind of classic idea Russian novels are big and incredibly depressing, whereas in fact they're hilarious.
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hilarious and maybe if you read perhaps the Pivir and Valler Haunsky
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translation actually emphasizes the opportunities for humor. When I read the
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first pages out loud to my undergraduate's people crack up because they
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start to hear all of the sinister and hilarious takebacks of the narrator as he
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modifies what he's saying. He continually says something and then reverses what
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he's saying and it has so many internal voices that sound very much like our own
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internal voices. So does Daphsky was a performer? He was a performer of every
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possible extreme and he took them to the hilt. He was very interested in
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theater all his life and he was himself an extremely good performer on stage and
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I think one of the first things that we start to realize is that Daphsky has
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returned to Russian now as a subject for theater. Every single thing that he's
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written is now being performed on the stage in Moscow and in other cities
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capitals. Are they being performed in order to amuse the public with humor or
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are they being staged in order to engage in serious political critique? Both
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of course you can't take them apart. I mean I'm not saying that he's just you know
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a comic writer. It's comic writing interlaced with the most extreme tragic and
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horrifying philosophical ideas and also a quite realistic assessment I think
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of where we're going. Yeah well I was thinking this morning of course what do I
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know about Putin and his psychology but it struck me that there's a Dostoevsky
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and element there where revisiting these characters and the brothers
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K. It seems to me that it's not just a question of the honor which is so important
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and disgrace but humiliation seems to be one of these Baso Continos of so
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many people in their motivation. So there's humiliation on the one and then
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the drive for aspiration for redemption on the other and so this is deep
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psychological territory that we enter into Indosoyevsky and I have a feeling
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that we in America don't understand even the ABCs of a Russian psyche like
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that of a Putin. Yeah probably nobody does. All tyrants or dictators have a
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complicated psyche and I think everybody knows that Putin began as in an orphanage
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in foster care and things like that he was small he had to fight for his
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existence he also had to be very clever he was sent off to be in the KGB in
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Germany and the thing about Putin is that you could say that the legend of the
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grand inquisitor is a very good model for Putin because he like the grand inquisitor
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constructs the effects of a religion without say I mean he claims he believes in
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it but without necessarily believing in it it's kind of like the Wizard of Oz
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you decide what it is that religion does to people and then you produce them by
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technology by other means and as you said miracle mystery and authority and
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this obviously a dictator has the power to create miracles of bread feed everybody or
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make it possible for them to feed themselves use capitalism Western capitalism
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and oil to suddenly create much more prosperity than there was produce
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miracles like the Sochi you know Olympics where it seems that Russia is able to
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master technology and to create a spectacle like no other and also that business of
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people wanting to worship together reunifying Russia which feels very fractured
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by the influx of Western influences along with this weird kind of Putin
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capitalism at the same time you master it by tapping into old desires for
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unity it's you know people it was amazing how the Soviet citizens who had
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renounced religion for two or three generations very quickly came back to
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eighty five percent or ninety percent about Russian Orthodox now well of
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course I should tell our listeners that you're alluding to Ivan kind of
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as a foreign to three brothers katamads who in his just position on the
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grand inquisitor where the inquisitor tells Jesus Christ that he made a
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mistake in resisting the three temptations of the devil and those temptations
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why don't you turn stones into bread and why don't you jump from a big you
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know be saved by angels and so forth or why don't you build a power base here so
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these three temptations are ones that you're saying proofing has actually gone
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for and that therefore it's under the eegis of that kind of satanic law which
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presumes to know the people much better than Christ knew the people
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according to the inquisitor which is why he puts him to death yes good that's a
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very good statement and and and the finesse of it is using the riches of oil
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wealth and capitalism funneled you know and manipulated the way the state
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does to produce this sense of a new world and new pride for a Russian population
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that one was always a late-comer on the stage of European history this was
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one of the prime ideas Russia had lived in the dark ages Peter the Great
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opened the window to Europe by founding Petersburg as push can said broke a
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window into Europe violently and then essentially conquered his own people and
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turned them into a westernized you know westernized system of classes none of
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which really works very well and the Slavophile idea emerged with you know and
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with the idea that Russian civilization was supposed to bring something new
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something redemptive the west had run its course it was mired in capitalism and
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Russia would create a new synthesis and indeed it delivered it in the form of
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its art I mean one of the strangest things on earth is that between 1862 and
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1881 which is only 19 years all of the great Russian novels were written just
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19 years I mean I don't think there's something comparable in the history of
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the world really and you know my personal opinion is that that body of novels
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out classes any other nations novelistic well for sure and I did a show years ago
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with our colleague Grisha Frigin yes there when we were talking about
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Isaac Baba I asked him the question that I'm going to ask you now which is if
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Soviet communism had had not come about would that tradition that great
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novelistic tradition flourished even more perhaps in the 20th century or did
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the communist just stomp it to death in its infancy like a snake I don't know
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one there are actually great Russian prose works it's just that they're not
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readily translatable because it's modernism so it doesn't have a strong
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plot and characters and things like that so I could mention plateau enough a
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great Soviet writer but you would probably say fairly unreadable because in
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translation it sort of disintegrates and you know what great novels were
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written in the West well the 20th century is full of them it's full of them but
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they it we at least I tend to think of modernism as being kind of the last
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place where great novels were written yeah I mean Lolita jumps up there partly
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because there aren't a lot of great competitors exactly and I did a show just
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you know there aired this week on the post-war American fiction and yes I was
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very constrained I did not allow myself on air to say that there very few
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Lolita is with one of the big exceptions of a truly great novel and they post
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war period in America and it's not that there aren't a lot of good ones there
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are tons of good ones but you know maybe it's it's just not every genre has
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its kind of a lifeline I know I know and and I agree that it's maybe not the
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moment for the novel but I have this strong conviction that the first
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half the 20th century could have seen the most extraordinary flourishing of the
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Russian novel tradition it's possible but that it was stomps yes no I think you're
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right I mean I'm not a great fan of socialist realism so can I now that we're
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talking about the politics of contemporary Russia and where and the grand
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inquisitor and of course even kara-mads of it's not only in the grand inquisitor
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chapter but in the very early part of the novel he's written an article yes
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ecclesiastical article where he makes the case that the church has to
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incorporate the state and that state has to become the church and he gives
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lines of reasoning very similar to the one that he proposes in the grand
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inquisitor which are the stark are alternatives either God and immortality
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exist in which case there is a foundation for morality and people will do good
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and love their neighbor or God does not exist and immortality does not exist in
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which case logically speaking there is no prohibition against the
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unconditional pursuit of one's own self-interest even at the price of crime not
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only is everything permitted but you are almost enjoined to adopt any means
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necessary to promote yourself interest to very stark alternatives that he
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proposes there now I'll bet Kamui when he writes in his book The Rebel and
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when he analyzes Ivan Kamajov's argument there he sees an Ivan a figure for the
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20th century metaphysical rebel who is also wants to bring about in the
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political sphere a all the sort of transformations that will be predicated on
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this atheism that God does not exist that immortality doesn't exist and that
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now the state will become the administrator of this new disenchanted reality if
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I can read to you and have you respond to what he says as we know the grand
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inquisitor is there interrogating Christ in the in the prison cell and he
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says to Christ the affair of this reorganization of the world has only just begun
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it is far from being terminated and the world has many other things to suffer but
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we shall achieve our aim we shall be Caesar and then we shall begin to think
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about universal happiness okay end quote this is where revolutionary movements
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always make a promise we're gonna get there but not now yes I continue this is
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a come here now by then the prisoner has been executed the grand inquisitors
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rain alone listening to quote the profound spirit the spirit of destruction
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and death the grand inquisitors proudly refuse freedom and the bread of heaven and
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offer the bread of this earth without freedom quote come down from the cross and
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we will believe in you their police agents are already crying on Golgotha but
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he did not come down and even at the most tortured moment of his agony he
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protested to God having been forsaken thus there are no longer any
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truths but faith and the mystery that the rebels reject and at which the
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grand inquisitors got everything is permitted and centuries of crime are prepared
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in that cataclysmic moment from Paul to Stalin the popes who have chosen
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Caesar have prepared the way for Caesar's who quickly learned to despise
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popes the unity of the world which was not achieved with God will henceforth be
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attempted in defiance of God and I think here come news the popes who have chosen
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Caesar and prepared the way for the Caesar's are the intellectuals yes above
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all and of course just to be a see had very strong views about that kind of the
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role that the intellectual plays in paving the way for these Caesar's do you
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find that this is an analysis that does something that gets provides a true
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insight into those he sees thinking about how a new regime of atheism or
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drawing the consequences of the absence of God and immortality can lead to this
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kind of totalitarianism in his already there in the brothers cut him out so
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was he was he prophetic in that sense yes he was prophetic also just in the
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absolutism with which it's phrased this idea that you know all or nothing if
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you have an afterlife haunting you then you're going to live your life in
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order to either achieve a good afterlife for avoid a terrible afterlife and
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that that will somehow continue when I think it's probably it can be shown that
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that actually doesn't hinder anything that life has all kinds of you know
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contains all different kinds of actions and religion always has some kind of a
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safety valve for people who believe in God and yet you know per per
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try crimes those are all you know all dusty f skis populated by people like that
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at nor are all intellectuals completely terrible atheists who then
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authorize crime that's an extremely polarizing kind of description of the
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intellectual and dusty asky is kind of partly responsible actually Russian
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novelists are responsible for that dramatic distribution of roles that there are
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natural people naturally religious people and then there are the
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intellectuals who have a distorted way of thinking and that is essentially a
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akin to a crime against the idea of humanity and what it's capable of what
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about the and that there are all those people in between it's interesting I
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liked what he said about from Paul to Stalin that actually Paul the creator of
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institutionalized Christianity and actually in some ways the destroyer of
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early Christianity is associated with the line of people who have taken
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religious faith and used it in order to create a totalizing system Stalin of
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course was brought up I mean he studied in a seminary and he used religion very
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much and religious sensibility very much for his own ends put you in
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certainly takes a leaf out of Stalin's book in that respect do you find that the
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brothers kind of much of the as a whole is an attempt to not only probe this
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either or proposal of Dimitri but even but it also actually takes aside in
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this either or equation that either there is a god and therefore there's
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morality and so forth and there's neighborly love is possible or there is no god
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and everything is permitted I think it's just a s.ky expresses the
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extremes but there are characters within brothers Karamazov who don't live on
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either side of those extremes and the characters are all in motion vis-a-vis
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each other the process of the novel is one that I think constantly demonstrates
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that there is an area in between the extremes or a synthesis of the
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extremes that goes beyond those extremes and one character like that is
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father's a sema one of the things about father's a sema is that he himself when we
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hear about him through Ayush's retelling of his life he himself was a
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sinner he was involved in an officer's life he was somebody quite like Dimitri
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when he was young and he gets involved with dueling and things like that he's
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almost sets up a duel which would have involved the killing of an innocent man
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and so on and and his humiliation before his wife and then he steps away from it
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but he also in another episode he does something he forces a man named Michael
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who killed a woman out of jealousy he forces him to a confession which
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actually will destroy the lives of his family and it's way after the effects
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and he's confronted his conscience and so on there's the possibility that
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father's a sema actually went too far in his aciduousness as a young novice to
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actually sort of prosecute the extreme of you know of church confession and
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after that he never does anything like that again it's as if he went to that
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limit of extreme and then stepped back he believes in God and immortality but he
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believes that there are thousand paths there are two extremes obviously
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that are channeled by Dostayeski the extreme atheist although one of the
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things about Ivan is that he has a hunger for religion and it constantly shows
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when he says things as provocations and that's something that father to
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see a man notices about him he really wants to be put a stop to actually he's
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looking for the edge and he wants it to establish itself and when he has the
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long conversation with Aliyosha about the torture of children the constant
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torment sadistic torment of children in all societies and especially in
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Russian society and is it would you agree Aliyosha to found a religion on the
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tears of even one innocent child and Aliyosha essentially can't say yes to that
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he says but Christ allows us to do that because Christ took on all the sins of
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the world but that's an abstraction when it comes to actually torturing a child
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you know in front of you it's not possible to
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ascent to that but this is part of Ivan's denunciation of or let's say his
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indictment of God it's his indictment of God but he really wants to somebody
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to explain to him how it's possible and he continues throughout his life in the
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novel to be looking for situations where he crosses a line and is finally told
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where to stop you can imagine that you know psychologically speaking all of
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these sons have had a father field of the Pavlovitch Karamazov one of the
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greatest characters and literature who really permits himself everything and
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has provided no indication of where there might be a limit and so they're all
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feeling their way attempting to find in their own lives something that will
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give them a shape and a limit that includes Dimitri who is the officer who also
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strangely is a poet for us that wouldn't fit you know he walks along with his
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yard long strides and he's violent and so on but he's the most poetic character
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by far and Ivan is the one who has the most extreme God hunger he does but he
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and God there stands also for the father and it's on it's on behalf of innocent
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children the suffering of the innocent children that he feels that God is
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guilty in this tribunal that he sets up to judge him and in that sense when he
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philosophically at least concedes that his own father could be killed we
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00:26:52.040 |
permissible to kill his own father there's clearly some sort of conflation going
|
00:26:56.140 |
on between Fjordor kind of madze of the father and you know God the father
|
00:27:00.500 |
and even yes and actually I just like to say one thing about that Fjordor
|
00:27:05.160 |
Karamazov wears of course Fjordor Dosteevsky's name Fjordor which means gift of
|
00:27:09.760 |
God and definitely there is a sense that every character who contains a huge
|
00:27:18.760 |
mixture of qualities has to work those out during the course of his life and
|
00:27:23.060 |
it's a never-ending process so just to jump to you know belief in God and
|
00:27:29.220 |
therefore the rest the world is tamed everything is orderly for Dosteevsky is
|
00:27:34.020 |
the wrong answer being in a crucible of doubt is actually the right place to be
|
00:27:40.060 |
every single day having to go through that feeling of doubt before you arrive and
|
00:27:46.740 |
in fact nobody ever does arrive because all of his novels actually don't end
|
00:27:51.220 |
but have to be continued kind of attached to them brothers Karamazov was
|
00:27:55.920 |
supposed to be a trilogy called the life of a great center and most people
|
00:28:00.920 |
think okay he's the great center will of course it's going to be one or it's
|
00:28:04.460 |
gonna be demetri well the life of the great center was going to be a
|
00:28:07.540 |
Lioria and Dosteevsky told a friend of his that the in the sequels to brothers
|
00:28:15.100 |
Karamazov allure was going to become a terrorist and he was going to go through
|
00:28:19.780 |
this immensely epic life of terrible sinning and essentially the very same
|
00:28:25.420 |
things that Dosteevsky was involved with as a young man and that youth were
|
00:28:29.580 |
involved with during Dosteevsky's old age attempting to make the world better by
|
00:28:35.020 |
a revolutionary well that's what I was trying to get at yes is that how Dosteevsky
|
00:28:40.400 |
understood the danger of atheism is that if you if you don't believe in God if
|
00:28:45.420 |
you don't believe there is a God then you are driven to take charge of the
|
00:28:51.660 |
recreation of the world according to your human norms of justice and that all
|
00:28:56.900 |
means are justified because you're trying to achieve this end what you and you
|
00:29:01.620 |
earlier spoke about the unification of Russian whatever transcendentals you
|
00:29:05.860 |
want to invoke for the project of remaking things in the absence of a divine
|
00:29:11.420 |
being yes the idea of a materialized justice that's visible in our lifetime
|
00:29:18.100 |
however this does you know it brings back the idea of Christ as a
|
00:29:22.940 |
revolutionary who actually did want to overturn a social order and didn't want to
|
00:29:28.380 |
you know who preached real property throw everything away not the religion
|
00:29:34.120 |
the Christianity turned out to be it was a very common idea in the 19th century
|
00:29:38.380 |
that Christ would first of all have been arrested and executed under 19th
|
00:29:43.620 |
century Christianity for sure but what I find dangerous yes disturbing
|
00:29:49.660 |
perturbing about even is what you mentioned earlier that he does have a real
|
00:29:54.380 |
nostalgia for religion and for a God and yet he doesn't believe it and regimes
|
00:30:01.180 |
that want to take the place of God yes who don't want to give up the the
|
00:30:07.900 |
function of God that they want to fill that void that they're the ones that
|
00:30:13.020 |
become dangerous I think that a real soft atheistic society where you have a
|
00:30:18.580 |
kind of incremental ameliorism or little reforms here and there we make our lives
|
00:30:22.860 |
more bearable getting through the days good enough that it's the
|
00:30:28.500 |
fanatic longing for the absolute that is in the souls of so many of Dosto F.C.'s
|
00:30:34.340 |
characters in this novel and others that it's certain ones and you're
|
00:30:40.220 |
completely right I mean dictatorships resemble theocracy more than anything
|
00:30:45.500 |
and they tend to have very thick kind of structures but I wanted to point out
|
00:30:51.660 |
that Alioa Shou is a character who kind of stumbles his way through the brothers
|
00:30:56.900 |
kara Ma's off he's the one who often is the listener but Dosto F.C. makes it
|
00:31:01.700 |
very clear that he starts to blush he starts to have secrets he starts to have
|
00:31:05.940 |
pink notes he you know he gets in he starts to perceive sexuality and all the
|
00:31:10.980 |
things that he was kind of he himself had very absolutely walled himself off from
|
00:31:16.100 |
because field of parlava just such a frightening image of everything is
|
00:31:20.540 |
possible everything goes he is at the end he becomes the founder of a religion
|
00:31:27.460 |
which is based on the death of a child Elioa who is actually who dies because
|
00:31:33.420 |
of a bunch of boys who create this peculiar cult around another boy
|
00:31:38.980 |
Koya Krasotkin and and what Alioa Shou does at the end is to create this group and
|
00:31:46.420 |
create a meaning around the death so that the actual you know it's the
|
00:31:52.620 |
creation of meaning is that a violation of the you know the boy or is that
|
00:31:58.020 |
something that's useful for the future those very boys are going to be the
|
00:32:02.140 |
terrorists in the next volume and I want it but let me say one more thing and
|
00:32:06.340 |
that is that father's a SEMA when he's actually preaching is so much like what
|
00:32:12.780 |
you were saying incremental every day has its own little problems to solve
|
00:32:18.780 |
and what those memorable things that he says that really speak to us now are
|
00:32:24.260 |
the in our life the extremes touch the life is a chain and there is nothing
|
00:32:31.780 |
that you do in your life that doesn't affect everybody around you think about
|
00:32:36.900 |
what you're doing even with your back if a child is behind you and you are doing
|
00:32:41.300 |
something unseemly you're imprinting the child with an image for the rest of
|
00:32:45.100 |
his life so always think that you're connected and he creates an image of our
|
00:32:51.300 |
kind of world you know an image that's both sort of biological physics you
|
00:32:56.500 |
know everything touches on a chemical level and everything touches also on a
|
00:33:00.740 |
moral level of you know the levi-nass idea respond to the human face in front of you
|
00:33:08.060 |
for Yvonne Yvonne has the niche in idea but the human face is disgusting I can't
|
00:33:14.340 |
stand actual proximity to my neighbor I can love him in the abstract but I can't
|
00:33:18.860 |
love him when he's right next to me and father's a SEMA says the hardest thing
|
00:33:23.420 |
in the world is to be with that face whether it's ugly whatever it is and to do
|
00:33:30.220 |
unto him or her as you would like her to do to you so that is an embodied Christianity
|
00:33:36.900 |
that is very far from a paternalistic God that sets limits it's yeah and I
|
00:33:44.140 |
like that I suppose to the abstraction right every abstraction of Yvonne which
|
00:33:49.060 |
is also translated into especially for me Soviet totalitarian abstraction
|
00:33:55.060 |
from the from the everyday the concrete and it's just becomes very easy to
|
00:34:01.260 |
speak about the iron laws of history this has to happen that has to happen you
|
00:34:04.620 |
have a bureaucracy that's removed from the actual real-life consequences of
|
00:34:09.500 |
their decisions and you just have horrors being perpetrated in in a realm of
|
00:34:14.940 |
abstraction now so Zima is enigmatic in a number of ways
|
00:34:23.820 |
I wanted to just mention that he was incredibly unpopular with the Russian
|
00:34:30.700 |
Orthodox clergy they hated him they said he was pantheistic he was an
|
00:34:35.700 |
earth lover he was a kmennical he had all different kinds of religious objects
|
00:34:42.180 |
on his table he occasionally ate sweets you know he broke fast and this and
|
00:34:47.140 |
that so they really disliked him in the novel in the novel
|
00:34:53.260 |
there's certain ones who dislike him know the clergy as readers they really dislike this
|
00:34:59.260 |
picture of this Orthodox priest they found him utterly for one thing you
|
00:35:04.340 |
know just to pantheistic too much in love with the earth as God's creation and
|
00:35:11.860 |
and so he's actually to to me he's a very progressive figure
|
00:35:16.940 |
could I ask about that powerful scene at the beginning of the novel where the
|
00:35:21.940 |
three brothers are united the father comes there demetri and the father go at it
|
00:35:25.580 |
and the son you know raises his hand up against the father which is the whole
|
00:35:30.740 |
question of does mankind have a right to rise up against an unjust God the way
|
00:35:37.380 |
demetri is presuming to rise up against an unjust father and at the end of
|
00:35:43.300 |
that scene so Zima father so Zima has this gesture of going and bowing
|
00:35:51.220 |
kneeling prostrating him I don't know exactly what the gesture is but but he
|
00:35:57.100 |
bows deeply in front of demetri and no one can understand what he meant by
|
00:36:02.780 |
doing that this gesture and gestures in general in the book I think are very
|
00:36:07.540 |
important what kind of gesture is it what is there anything that we can decode
|
00:36:11.940 |
in it yes it's that scene is set up as something that does they have
|
00:36:18.180 |
ski love to do you could call it a bowing duel we see them often and you know
|
00:36:23.580 |
people how do people pass each other in the street so that they don't lose
|
00:36:27.380 |
status you know who chips is hat slightly more than the other so in the
|
00:36:31.260 |
bowing duel you have first of all this question of how do you enter the space of
|
00:36:36.020 |
the sacred elders you know room and everybody does something that indicates to
|
00:36:40.980 |
what degree they're westernized and mousse of his very western and he you know and the
|
00:36:45.860 |
question is do you do a bow with your hands to the side do you bow how low do you
|
00:36:51.180 |
bow and things like that that's the secular European courtly bow that implies
|
00:36:57.020 |
we are all gentlemen here but our degree of bowing depends how big a
|
00:37:01.980 |
gentleman we are and on the other hand you have the orthodox bow which is a
|
00:37:07.020 |
bow when father's a seema does it he does does the full one it is a lying down on
|
00:37:13.060 |
the ground completely prostrate which means bowing down to the earth and really
|
00:37:19.260 |
being very close to what a lotia does later which is kissing the earth and that
|
00:37:23.620 |
is the idea that the earth itself is sacred it's it's a mother and you're not
|
00:37:29.460 |
sort of raising your hands and gesturing to god in the sky you're actually
|
00:37:33.340 |
confirming your faith by lying down on the earth and it confirms the faith in human
|
00:37:39.980 |
beings working out their destinies in time and you know in earthly space and so
|
00:37:47.740 |
you could say that father's a seema bows down as he says as later said to the
|
00:37:52.700 |
suffering because he feels that Demetri's course will be a course of intense
|
00:37:57.580 |
suffering but it will have a sacred element to it later on when Katarina a
|
00:38:06.540 |
Demetri's telling Alioa Shabal his experiences with Katarina and he says this
|
00:38:10.540 |
is going to be in the style of Paul the cock who was the French you know sort of
|
00:38:14.260 |
paperback novelist full of sleazy scenes and he does tell some sleazy scenes
|
00:38:18.980 |
and there we have this interesting repetition of the bowing duel because
|
00:38:25.620 |
there Demetri essentially it's about lending the money and what she has to do to get
|
00:38:32.780 |
the money and he doesn't it's not that he says she has to give herself to him
|
00:38:37.140 |
he undresses her with his eyes he just stares at her and she hit her whole body is
|
00:38:44.460 |
exposed to him as an object and he slowly runs his eyes down her and she is
|
00:38:50.900 |
made to feel the humiliation of being in this officer's power and she
|
00:38:56.420 |
and he didn't boast yes and he bows and he bows so you have that combination of
|
00:39:01.620 |
gentlemanly power you know and he he's able to do it because for once he's cut
|
00:39:07.380 |
money and he can use it to establish his what something something very dubious
|
00:39:12.820 |
which is his nobility his nobility is very shaky and so then what does she do
|
00:39:20.140 |
she prostrate herself on the ground all the way down a true Russian bout of the
|
00:39:25.780 |
earth and you could say okay she's quoting father's a seamless bow but look at
|
00:39:30.260 |
the context she's using it to trump him with the Russian Orthodox sacred
|
00:39:35.900 |
spiritual bow and then it becomes actually a weapon in this battle battle of
|
00:39:41.140 |
wills between them so there's no such thing in Dostosky as a gesture that's not
|
00:39:46.060 |
contextualizing that that doesn't enter into this relationship of power and
|
00:39:51.120 |
humiliation going back and forth so that is if you want to do a deep psychology
|
00:39:59.260 |
find that there's a lot of perversion in that duel because she has been
|
00:40:04.660 |
humiliated by him and the way she deals with that humility is not to get
|
00:40:10.740 |
revenge on him at least not immediately but to take upon herself this
|
00:40:17.860 |
humiliation and this is that great word that is the title of one of the chapter
|
00:40:25.020 |
sections that if not the roof which means how would you translate that it's well
|
00:40:31.740 |
this is one of those regional words that's very hard to translate and I'm happy
|
00:40:36.020 |
to talk about it it's often it used to be translated as lacerations and I think
|
00:40:40.580 |
we think of lacerations as something external like cuts or mark you know with marks
|
00:40:46.180 |
or something like that and it's also by Pavir and Valahon skid's translated as
|
00:40:50.940 |
strains and I have to say that strains kind of you know it we tend to think of
|
00:40:56.100 |
straining as you know you try really hard you know straining to do something
|
00:40:59.860 |
Nadrif means an internal rupture it's an internal rupture of organs or
|
00:41:07.780 |
something inside that starts to split and you know and the word that I thought of
|
00:41:13.100 |
this morning because I just taught Beckett yesterday was dehi sense dehi
|
00:41:18.460 |
sauce which is rupturing along the same place where there was a scene where there
|
00:41:26.340 |
was surgery a surgical wound that doesn't heal properly and it starts to rip
|
00:41:31.740 |
in the same place and even deeper into the tissues further dehi sauce which is
|
00:41:38.460 |
you know nobody's gonna translate as dehi sauce because you know very few people
|
00:41:42.460 |
know what it means and but it's one it's a word that Beckett really liked and
|
00:41:46.780 |
it's the idea that language and everything rips along the same wounds you
|
00:41:52.820 |
stitch it up with other language but it'll rip even further because those are
|
00:41:57.740 |
wounded places and those are also the fertile places because the other
|
00:42:01.860 |
meaning of dehi sauce is also the scattering of seeds when the pod rips and this
|
00:42:07.540 |
is a very dusty f-skiing idea that the very wound and the splitting of the
|
00:42:12.660 |
apparent sutures actually then creates something fertile the famous epigraph to
|
00:42:18.820 |
brothers K which is you know let the seed fall into the earth if the seed falls
|
00:42:26.540 |
into the earth and rarts it will bring forth much fruit but it has to die first
|
00:42:33.340 |
and this is and that is the essential dusty f-skiing progress through any
|
00:42:37.620 |
novel that anybody who tries to pick God first and allow God then to dictate
|
00:42:44.940 |
his life is not passing through that fertile dying and being reborn again
|
00:42:51.620 |
through doubt yeah but let's stick for a moment with Demetri and Gia because her
|
00:42:58.020 |
I'm gonna use the word laceration it's all right good enough or what what's
|
00:43:02.820 |
wrong with rapture well ruptures fine except that okay so here is Edward
|
00:43:10.060 |
Vasio like who writes about the word where he says to this must be added
|
00:43:16.860 |
the dosais special use of the word to mean a purposeful hurting of oneself
|
00:43:21.980 |
and to this an explanation of the purpose it is for dosaiski a purposeful and
|
00:43:28.820 |
pleasurable self hurt good yeah this idea of a self yeah that that seems to be
|
00:43:36.260 |
very committed to in a kind of perverse is it masochism is it the kind of
|
00:43:42.060 |
self hurt that won't let go of the wound because it's it's a profound humiliation
|
00:43:47.180 |
and that therefore her taking on of all these gestures of submission this
|
00:43:52.820 |
total submission to Demetri as if you were a God to whom she prostrates herself
|
00:43:58.740 |
the way the sousema would to to his God that this all involves some kind of
|
00:44:06.380 |
not healing of the wound but aggravation and of the wound itself and it seems to
|
00:44:14.380 |
be part of the psychology not only of her but of other characters who are
|
00:44:18.180 |
dominated by sense of humiliation yes you're completely right and but I
|
00:44:23.580 |
wanted to ask something has a such a laceration I think a lot of people would
|
00:44:29.100 |
say that yes although I didn't want to get you off track go ahead yeah no what I
|
00:44:33.340 |
wanted to say about that is that yes she says I want you to worship me as a
|
00:44:38.340 |
God sorry you said that she worships with Demetri but in fact very you know
|
00:44:44.300 |
not too far later she says I want you Demetri to worship me as a God you
|
00:44:50.500 |
know I will give you everything you need and she puts herself in that
|
00:44:54.140 |
totalitarian position you have to admit that there's something very
|
00:44:58.500 |
tempting for the Christian mentality to do that to take its own acceptance of
|
00:45:03.780 |
suffering and Christ suffering as the position therefore of power if I've
|
00:45:10.220 |
suffered then I've made the ultimate sacrifice I mean we see it all over our
|
00:45:14.580 |
country therefore now I am in the position of power I assume the God
|
00:45:20.860 |
position by virtue of my constant self-inflicted suffering I mean it's
|
00:45:26.060 |
something that Nietzsche essentially diagnosed and and and just I think one of
|
00:45:31.380 |
the reasons Nietzsche loved us they ask you so much is because he recognized
|
00:45:34.780 |
that actually being dramatized constantly in the psychology of the
|
00:45:38.740 |
characters do you believe that you know sie ski thought that's suffering is or
|
00:45:45.140 |
could be under certain circumstances redemptive yes of course definitely I
|
00:45:51.180 |
mean he always he always thinks it's redemptive if it continually changes it
|
00:45:58.980 |
being stuck in a self-lacerating you know just essentially which is a self
|
00:46:03.340 |
pleasuring in a masochistic way a sadomasochistic way that is you know he
|
00:46:10.500 |
doesn't if it's stuck and it's arrested and it's just perpetually repeating
|
00:46:14.820 |
itself obviously that's a dead end but doesn't even have the the most
|
00:46:18.900 |
devastating argument against that that suffering is redemptive and he brings in
|
00:46:24.600 |
all this forensic evidence from newspaper articles and so forth the
|
00:46:29.060 |
suffering of children and that anyone who is going to say that all this human
|
00:46:34.740 |
misery that makes up history yes can be
|
00:46:39.540 |
transfigured some kind of redemptive scenario is just the strain of the
|
00:46:48.420 |
credibility as such that even at least can't go that far yes but I think
|
00:46:53.940 |
everybody who reads those passages recognizes that Ivan is he he collects
|
00:47:01.620 |
clippings you know he's one of those fanatic collectors of likes you know he
|
00:47:05.860 |
collects only things that match he creates this big box of clippings of
|
00:47:10.820 |
sadistic torture of children well that is going to really change your opinion of
|
00:47:15.460 |
the world if that's what you collect so it's a self-fulfilling prophecy it is
|
00:47:20.140 |
that laceration and you could say that feel the
|
00:47:23.940 |
problem it did torch torment its children by neglect by it all kinds of
|
00:47:27.940 |
different ways so he creates a world view that fits what he has collected and
|
00:47:34.820 |
that therefore he eliminates everything else and one of the things that we see
|
00:47:39.220 |
with allure and the boys is that allure should goes into that situation that
|
00:47:43.700 |
seems to be clear cut somebody's you know the bunch of boys are beating up a
|
00:47:49.060 |
one weaker boy the weaker boy turns out to have done something really
|
00:47:52.180 |
disgusting so they were right and then it turns out that every single boy has
|
00:47:56.580 |
his individual reasons for behave going along with the group and things
|
00:48:02.100 |
like that and gradually their different voices start to emerge and it might be the
|
00:48:07.060 |
case that children are not as innocent as even believes they're not as
|
00:48:10.820 |
he says he says age seven you know after age seven you know it's all over
|
00:48:15.860 |
only up to age seven so he like a lot of absolutist people is looking for
|
00:48:21.220 |
purity purity does not exist it may exist chemically
|
00:48:25.380 |
in the world but it does not exist in human beings so why does even go mad
|
00:48:30.580 |
interview? Ivan goes mad because Dastaya
|
00:48:35.300 |
industry asking novels madness is the place of fertility as it is in Shakespeare
|
00:48:41.380 |
as it is in Joyce as it is in many artistic writers it's it's rational
|
00:48:49.620 |
sticking to limits or rational rules of argumentation
|
00:48:55.940 |
that actually are undone by artists of this type Dastaya
|
00:49:00.100 |
ski was a passionate reader of Shakespeare I just wanted to mention that in one
|
00:49:04.660 |
year at the engineering institute when he was going to classes his father made
|
00:49:08.500 |
him
|
00:49:09.140 |
try to become an engineer and I always tell this to Stanford students like your
|
00:49:12.900 |
parents he wants you to be an engineer but at night he read
|
00:49:16.900 |
voraciously and in one year he read all of Shakespeare
|
00:49:20.820 |
all of good to almost all of buzz-zack all of ETA Hoffman those were just the
|
00:49:27.700 |
for that he he mentions and all of these you can imagine
|
00:49:31.380 |
that in his incredibly fertile mind they're really
|
00:49:34.580 |
interacting with each other and you see really this tremendous
|
00:49:40.500 |
performative quality of Dastaya ski to
|
00:49:44.500 |
allow threads from all of the different artists that he loves to
|
00:49:48.020 |
interpenetrate if you look at field of the problem of it how is he like field of
|
00:49:51.620 |
Dastaya ski
|
00:49:53.300 |
he is like field of Dastaya ski in have being the most incredible
|
00:49:57.220 |
tissue of quotations and illusions to all kinds of cultural sources
|
00:50:02.980 |
including a lot of the Bible and he mixes it up when you look at the footnotes
|
00:50:06.820 |
it's just this wonderful tap tapestry um so the bringing of
|
00:50:13.140 |
different text into contact with each other so that they strike sparks against
|
00:50:17.140 |
each other that is Dastaya skis genius
|
00:50:21.620 |
and he also liked to read philosophy um he also at another point read
|
00:50:27.300 |
vico and tear and teary and he said i want to read a
|
00:50:31.060 |
do systematic education of myself in philosophy and in cultural anthropology
|
00:50:38.180 |
uh it's interesting the vico connection
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00:50:42.100 |
because one could say and i think it has been suggested uh by one critic that
|
00:50:48.740 |
the brother's case does have a vaconian system vico
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00:50:53.380 |
i keep promising our listeners will do a show on in one day
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00:50:56.500 |
yeah you really said but uh he had a theory of the natural course of
|
00:51:00.900 |
development of any civilization that they go through these
|
00:51:05.060 |
ages the age of gods the age of heroes the age of men
|
00:51:09.220 |
and then at the end of this course you have the age of the renewed barbarism
|
00:51:15.140 |
which is the barbarism or reflection so there's this sense that
|
00:51:20.340 |
uh and then it all starts over but that you that all the brothers
|
00:51:25.780 |
represent a different age uh and that smet yakuj
|
00:51:32.340 |
who is the illegitimate son uh may represent the age of this undoing of the whole
|
00:51:42.340 |
course and they're and the descent into cynicism and barbarism or
|
00:51:47.140 |
reflection and this kind of disaggregation of the whole story
|
00:51:52.260 |
i don't know but he's not the last word in the book
|
00:51:54.980 |
no he's not the last word because uh like vico doesn't allow the
|
00:51:59.300 |
barbarism or reflection to be the last word because he says that we can always
|
00:52:02.820 |
do something to offset it and make sure it doesn't it there's nothing
|
00:52:07.380 |
that dictates it's necessarily having to happen
|
00:52:11.860 |
but what would be necessary to offset it is a certain kind of
|
00:52:16.660 |
pace to conceal some on the moral level the ethical level and maybe a
|
00:52:20.260 |
certain set of recipes of dosuise himself proposes
|
00:52:23.700 |
in order to uh for stall the coming of the anarchy of the anarchist
|
00:52:29.140 |
soon or of the the cynics and the skeptics
|
00:52:33.380 |
so that's just an aside here about the connection between dosuise and vico
|
00:52:37.620 |
it shows you how many ways the brothers could could actually be read
|
00:52:41.620 |
yes well i as i think that you know it's a temptation to read the
|
00:52:47.380 |
brothers as types and of course dastesky sets that have that way
|
00:52:51.540 |
however i think that the more the novel progresses the more we see that the
|
00:52:56.180 |
age of god heroes and men isn't each of them in action
|
00:53:01.940 |
one of the things that one of the prime beliefs of Russians was that they
|
00:53:06.340 |
came in order to syncretize and synthesize so they in some ways are a
|
00:53:12.980 |
separate people they you know they read vico they love the idea
|
00:53:17.860 |
of a providential design every nation having its own way of developing
|
00:53:22.580 |
but then the Russian ideas that they come along and they synthesize from
|
00:53:26.340 |
everybody else their late cameras they're incredibly well-read they're
|
00:53:29.780 |
also auto-didax and they synthesize it all each person for himself and
|
00:53:35.140 |
for the nation and that means that god heroes and men are all operating at
|
00:53:39.860 |
the same time along with the smiad deco for reflection
|
00:53:43.140 |
good for you now now we get into the real
|
00:53:46.980 |
substance of the of the vikonian theory because
|
00:53:50.660 |
the actual last stage which is the barbarism of reflection is not a fourth
|
00:53:56.020 |
stage that follows upon the previous three it is actually the
|
00:54:00.500 |
chaotic commingling and co-presence of all the ages at the same time okay
|
00:54:06.580 |
so the barbarism of reflection is
|
00:54:10.180 |
when the whole course or the course of things
|
00:54:14.420 |
becomes chaotic and and all of everything that has
|
00:54:18.020 |
preceded that moment now is uh...
|
00:54:22.820 |
comes back and and is is
|
00:54:24.740 |
chaoticly uh...
|
00:54:27.060 |
jumbled together
|
00:54:28.660 |
in that moment so i
|
00:54:30.740 |
i didn't want to suggest that it's a fourth stage distinct from the previous
|
00:54:33.940 |
on the contrary it is now
|
00:54:36.580 |
the Russian desire to synthesize a different thing because synthesis would
|
00:54:40.740 |
mean ordering
|
00:54:41.700 |
yes here is and a new form
|
00:54:44.040 |
yes or order
|
00:54:45.260 |
this is the disordering of that
|
00:54:47.260 |
yes and actually uh...
|
00:54:49.220 |
the brothers karmaz f has a very beautiful order really
|
00:54:53.060 |
uh... it of course is plotted onto the idea
|
00:54:56.580 |
of a court case that you know we have this image of
|
00:55:00.820 |
the reform justice system that's an imported from the west but
|
00:55:04.740 |
russians are of course
|
00:55:07.620 |
you know it's being um...
|
00:55:10.580 |
developed in russian circumstances in highly unorthodox ways
|
00:55:15.220 |
and we have what you could say is we know that it's a miscarriage of justice i
|
00:55:19.460 |
mean it's amazing how many times does d_f_s_ keep can have us go through
|
00:55:24.820 |
different versions of the story and still remain completely enthralled by it
|
00:55:28.820 |
while we
|
00:55:30.020 |
know we think we know exactly what happened
|
00:55:32.900 |
to meet three didn't do it something saved him at that moment when he could
|
00:55:36.740 |
have committed the act of violence while watching his father in
|
00:55:40.180 |
in that screen is literally like he's watching a movie he's sitting there in
|
00:55:44.740 |
in the dark and looking at his father lit up on a screen and he's imagining
|
00:55:48.740 |
everything
|
00:55:49.700 |
that would lead to
|
00:55:51.220 |
the final act of violence that's been predicted all over because
|
00:55:54.060 |
languages violent
|
00:55:55.900 |
the novel has a great structure in that we see that the court case actually
|
00:56:00.500 |
emerges in a miscarriage
|
00:56:02.620 |
uh... of justice
|
00:56:04.140 |
and yet we've seen enough evidence which dame tree actually accepts that
|
00:56:08.540 |
spiritually he was in the wrong because he gave off in all his life
|
00:56:13.340 |
he produced violence at every turn in language in threats
|
00:56:17.500 |
in everything that created an atmosphere violence and so he takes that on
|
00:56:21.620 |
himself
|
00:56:23.060 |
he didn't do the act you know the patriarchal act
|
00:56:26.780 |
but he created small acts of violence everywhere
|
00:56:30.900 |
and for that
|
00:56:32.060 |
and that is essentially his internal acceptance
|
00:56:35.380 |
money cut to wrap up i'd like to ask this question
|
00:56:38.740 |
about justice whether
|
00:56:41.140 |
you believe that for dus ria ski justice is the highest value
|
00:56:45.420 |
and the reason i asked that is because for
|
00:56:47.500 |
sub someone like even it is the highest value and that in the name of justice he
|
00:56:51.620 |
can actually indict god
|
00:56:53.420 |
yes justice world
|
00:56:55.780 |
but uh...
|
00:56:56.940 |
i have a
|
00:56:58.060 |
suspicion that for dus ria ski justice might not have been the highest value
|
00:57:02.460 |
finally
|
00:57:03.500 |
i think you're completely right and actually
|
00:57:06.700 |
i mean this will probably sound a bit
|
00:57:09.100 |
wet but
|
00:57:10.660 |
does dia skis perception of life was that it was paradise
|
00:57:15.220 |
and what his aim was was to
|
00:57:19.940 |
get people to
|
00:57:22.100 |
for at least a moment to
|
00:57:24.020 |
let the scales from
|
00:57:25.540 |
fall from their eyes and to live as if they were in paradise as if they were
|
00:57:29.420 |
worthy of living on this earth
|
00:57:32.020 |
and to treat it the earth itself as god's paradise and
|
00:57:36.060 |
human beings as people who constantly blind themselves to the truth that
|
00:57:40.620 |
they are in paradise
|
00:57:42.100 |
and they destroy
|
00:57:43.700 |
you know the possibility of its being a paradise
|
00:57:46.980 |
so it that's also a very i think a modern kind of
|
00:57:51.220 |
uh... vision
|
00:57:52.700 |
uh... which is different from the idea of justice which is kind of
|
00:57:57.980 |
counting up offenses and figuring out some kind of retribution that will
|
00:58:01.980 |
cancel them out so that you start on another place
|
00:58:05.060 |
the steevsky's place and this was something that he said when he was sent to
|
00:58:08.260 |
siberia
|
00:58:09.580 |
he said he wrote to his brother in this famous letter
|
00:58:12.460 |
if only
|
00:58:13.420 |
i still feel that i'm in paradise just let me stand in the sun
|
00:58:17.860 |
that's good enough for me
|
00:58:19.300 |
we've been speaking with moneeka green leaf professor of slavix and
|
00:58:22.700 |
comparative literature here at stanford
|
00:58:25.100 |
thanks for coming on moneeka
|
00:58:27.380 |
it was a delight
|
00:58:28.340 |
and i am robert harris and for entitled opinions
|
00:58:31.280 |
stay tuned for our next broadcast next week
|
00:58:34.000 |
take care
|
00:58:36.780 |
beepy
|
00:58:42.220 |
to one of the up inside of the up
|
00:58:50.600 |
to one forget about the other the other the up
|
00:58:56.600 |
I've won't stay in love with my soul but God, I've won't let it go
|
00:59:19.900 |
I've been told with this screen, who knew couldn't hide but after there's a way to show
|
00:59:33.900 |
I've won't let it start to break so cold
|
00:59:42.900 |
Just did a train, who left us in love with me and I hadn't written to love to me
|
00:59:51.900 |
What now was wrong with me, with me, yeah
|
01:00:00.900 |
To all of me, I've been saying everything, to all of forget the fear of me
|
01:00:15.900 |
I've won't stay in love with my soul, I've won't let it go
|
01:00:26.900 |
I've won't let it go, I've been saying everything, with me
|
01:00:36.900 |
From the world's no love here in the darkness, I know my soul
|
01:00:52.900 |
Can't break free until I'm out and gone
|