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| Dostoyevsky, Fjodor Michajlowitsch: Notes from Und
Dostoyevsky, Fjodor Michajlowitsch: Notes from Und
Study Guide for Dostoyevsky: Notes from
Underground
Notes from Underground is one of the most influential pieces of
fiction in Western European history. It has attracted attention for many
reasons. 1) It contains an all-out assault on Enlightenment rationalism and the
idea of progress which foreshadows many such assaults in the mid-to-late
twentieth century. 2) It is an outstanding example of Dostoyevsky`s
psychological skills, depicting a character motivated by many contradictory
impulses. Such contradictions were not clearly understood in the nineteenth
century, but Freud and modern psychology generally were to explore in depth the
irrational bases of much human thought. 3) One of the most salient
characteristics of the Underground Man is his profound self-contempt combined
with an exquisitely sensitive ego--a combination that is much discussed these
days. 4) The story contains one of the first characters whose childhood
experiences have led him to fear love and intimacy even though he longs for
them: another topic of intense interest currently. 5) It portrays one of the
first anti-heroes in fiction, a protagonist utterly lacking every trait of the
Romantic hero and living out a futile life on the margins of society. Such
figures were to dominate much serious fiction in the mid-twentieth century,
notably Albert Camus` Meursault in The Stranger.
Because the narrator (he has no name) of this story is a thoroughly
disagreeable person who seems to go out of the way to offend his readers, some
care is needed to read the story well. First, it is important to keep in mind
that the Underground Man, as he is traditionally called ("UM" below) is not
Fyodor Dostoyevsky, as the notes at the beginning and end of the story make
clear. He shares some of Dostoyevsky`s ideas, but he is also the target of
Dostoyevsky`s satire. Dostoyevsky enjoyed handicapping himself by placing some
of his favorite arguments in the mouth of a character he despised. In this and
in other works, he strongly resists the impulse to sweep the reader away by
making his views irresistible. He wants you to be aware of both their strengths
and weaknesses, and make your mind up independently. Second, although some
readers find that they are identifying with the UM to some extent, unlike most
popular fiction, this is not a story in which you are expected to identify with
the narrator. The danger is, in fact, that the reader will become so exasperated
with his tone and manner as to simply refuse to pay attention what he is saying.
Consider the UM as a complex portrait, lacking surface appeal, but filled with
fascinating detail which reveals itself only upon close examination. Third, it
is crucial not simply to let the UM`s self-contradictions cancel each other out
and dismiss him as a madman whose ravings are not worth deciphering. It is
precisely in the tension between various emotions and ideas that
significance of the UM`s narrative lies. Close reading will reveal a careful and
consistent psychological portrait.
The page numbers cited below are those of the MacAndrew translation
published by New American Library.
Part One is a sustained argument containing scraps of illustrative
narrative, introducing the UM and articulating his assault on rationalism and
progress and delineating what he thinks is wrong with the modern self-conscious
intellectual (himself). Part Two is a much more easily comprehensible narrative
of an episode from his life in which he is offered a chance to escape from his
web of self-hate and spite. In Part One he is all scorn and contempt for the
reader; in Part Two this contempt turns on himself. A sensitive reading will
reveal that there is much to pity in him. The numbers preceding each paragraph
indicate the page number in the story which the question relates to.
Part One
I
90: How many self-contradictions can you find in the first paragraph? Does
he really respect medicine? Explain? What does the fact that he refuses medical
help out of spite tell us about his attitude toward freedom?
91: What evidence is there that he is acutely self-conscious about how he
appears to others? Is he aware of having any need for human affection? Is he
able to tolerate such affection?
92: Is he really indifferent to his readers` reactions? How can you tell?
He introduces what he calls a "stupid, useless excuse," which turns out to be
one of his main theses in the rest of Part I. What does this "excuse" mean? Is
he more worried about being despised or being laughed at? How can you
tell?
II
93: How can you illustrate already his thesis that "unhappy nineteenth
century intellectuals" like himself are too "abstract and premeditated?" What
does he mean by this?
94: What evidence is there that he is a masochist? (Look the word up if you
aren`t familiar with it.)
95: What does it mean to be "guilty in the first place?" Is it possible to
feel guilty without being aware of any specific wrongful act that caused the
guilty feelings? Look for elements in his story later that might have led him to
grow up feeling guilty, or--as people say today--with low self-esteem.
III
96-7: Can you contrast what the UM calls "the spontaneous man" or
l`homme de la nature et de la vérité (man of nature and
truth) with the "unhappy nineteenth century intellectual" he discussed earlier?
What are the differences between them? What are his feelings toward each of
them?
98-9: Look closely at the paragraph that begins "Thus you may. . . ." Does
he care about our reactions? How can you tell? In the last full paragraph he
presents satirically presents the central ideas of nineteenth century
pragmatism, which argues that all morality is an illusion founded on
self-interest, that there is no such thing as altruism (much as Voltaire had
done earlier). He objects to the way in which such pragmatists (like the social
Darwinists) complacently presented self-interest as scientifically proven
superior to altruism. What is the point he is making about two plus two making
four?
IV
100-101: How does his example of the toothache illustrate this idea of the
self-conscious intellectual? What changes when he becomes too self-aware about
the pain he is experiencing? Examine the last paragraph in this section. He
seems to be having a dialogue with his imaginary reader. How does he try to
defend himself against this reader? How does this paragraph illustrate the point
he was just making about self-consciousness?
V
102: Is it possible to be sincerely in love and faking it at the same time?
Do you believe him when he says he fell in love simply out of boredom?
VI
He is so desperate for some kind of identity that he is willing even to
have an absurdly trivial identity. What example does he use? Your notes in the
Afterword of this volume explain that this paragraph contains an attack on an
artist named Gué (whose name begins with the same letter as the Russian
word for "s___" and a writer named Saltykov-Shchedrin, who had written a story
called "Something to Everybody`s Liking." How serious is his last sentence? Do
you think he feels ambivalently about it?
VII
105-108: He begins by satirizing the ideals of the Enlightenment thinkers
who thought that if people only acted out of enlightened self-interest they
would become "kind and noble." What examples does he use to try to prove this
theory wrong? Why does the notion of automatic moral reform make him so angry?
Why does he say it makes a human being into a "piano key or an organ stop?"
(Today we would say a robot, or a cog in a machine.)
109-110: The first full paragraph is specifically aimed at Chernyshevsky`s
What is to Be Done? It was a utopian novel which used the metaphor of the
Crystal Palace (the world`s first all steel-and glass building, erected to
display modern machinery at a fair celebrating Queen Victoria`s reign in
England). What are his major objections to living in a perfect world? Do you
agree with him that individual freedom and utopianism necessarily conflict?
VIII
111: The UM says that if we ever completely understand human psychology to
the point that we clearly grasp out motivations for our feelings, we will cease
to have true, spontaneous feelings. Can you think of any examples where
self-awareness of this kind has interfered with spontaneous feelings in your own
life or anyone else`s?
113: How does he say desire relates to reason?
115: What is his reaction to the fact that at his time very little was
known about what determined human desires? How do you think he would have
reacted to today`s psychologists?
IX
116-117: What is his argument against the typically Victorian notion that
the essence of the human spirit is to be found in creativity and accomplishment?
118: Why does he keep talking about "twice two?" What is he using it as a
metaphor for?
X
118-120: How do you think he would have reacted to Marxism?
XI
121: How accurate do you think the analysis of the UM in the first
paragraph on this page is? What does it show about his self-awareness? What
evidence is there on this page that he feels he has revealed too much about
himself in that paragraph?
122: What does he mean by the sentence that begins "But there are things,
too, that a man won`t dare to admit event to himself . . . ?" How does this
theory relate to the Freudian concept of the unconscious mind (incorrectly often
called the "subconscious")? Rousseau`s autobiography was famous for revealing
some very unpleasant details about his private life. If a person is scrupulously
honest, as the UM says he is going to be, does that make him a good person? Why
does the UM keep repeating that he intends that this writing will never be read
by anyone?
Part Two
I 123-124: Nekrasov was a popular Romantic poet. This poem recurs in
the story at p. 159. What situation does Nekrasov seem to be depicting here? The
UM seems to break off in embarrassment in the middle of quoting this poem. How
does this interruption relate to the major themes of Part One?
126-127: What does he say is the main difference between German and Russian
idealists?
129: What are his vices? Are they really very vicious? What is it about the
military officer`s action that offends him so much?
130: What does he mean by saying he longed for something more literary?
How does it relate to the themes of Part One?
131: Why do you think he didn`t send the exposé of the officer in
under his own name? Do you believe him when he says it was rejected because such
exposés weren`t in vogue?
132-135: In the code of gentlemen the proper response to an insult was to
challenge the offending party to a duel with swords or pistols. In what ways is
the UM`s revenge a ridiculously inadequate substitute for such a duel? Note that
in the last paragraph of this section he refuses to tell us how he felt when he
finally realized what a fool he`d made out of himself. See if you can find other
passages in which he censors what he is willing to reveal to us, despite the
fact that he is usually eager to run on and on about his faults.
II
137-138: What is absurd about the fantasies he describes? What evidence is
there that even though he ridicules these fantasies, he is defensive about them?
III
140: In what way does his treatment by his former school companions compare
with his treatment by the officer?
146: Do you think these young men were really "incredibly
depraved?"
147: What evidence does he present here that he is incapable of tolerating
love and affection even though he desperately yearns for it? What do you think
causes some people to be like this, powerfully attracting others and then
rejecting them once it is clear the victim truly loves and admires the lover?
Note that his passage strongly foreshadows his relationship with Liza.
IV
152: Why do you think he doesn`t tell us the amount of his
salary?
155-156: Can you analyze his emotions while he is denouncing the others at
the party? How do they react to him?
V
160: What does it tell you about him that even a prostitute insults
him?
161-162: How do his plans for revenge illustrate his self-portrait in Part
One? He seems to feel that by leaving his coat open he is making a boldly
suicidal gesture. Winters in St. Petersburg can be brutal, but what evidence is
there that it is not all that cold?
163: Why does he hope he is repulsive to the prostitute he
chooses?
VI
Nineteenth century authors usually avoided explicitly depicting sexual
activity, so much so that modern readers sometimes miss their subtle cues that
sex has occurred. You may take it for granted that when this section begins the
UM has had sex with Liza and is lying beside her on the bed afterwards. An old
stereotypical line used by a man to a prostitute is to ask, "What`s a nice girl
like you doing in a place like this?" Try to figure out what the UM`s motives
are in trying to convince Liza that she should not be a prostitute. Why doesn`t
he succeed at first in making her feel ashamed of herself at first?
168: What does Liza`s reaction to his saying that she could still marry
suggest about her background?
169: What is it that he especially objects to in the life a prostitute
which relates to a central theme of Part One?
171: What does her reaction to his portrait of a loving father reveal about
her?
172: Does she accept the argument that poverty is responsible for criminal
behavior?
174: What does she mean by saying he`s "just like a book?" How accurate is
she in her judgment of him?
VII
During the time this story was published there was an immense amount of
discussion about the social problem posed by prostitution, and there were many
books and articles propounding exactly the same theme that the UM uses here. His
speech to Liza is a chain of journalistic clichés.
179: What are in his motives in telling her all this? See also p. 185 for
further evidence.
181: Why does she bring him the photograph?
182: What do you think is the "obscene truth" he is realizing at the end of
this section?
186-187: How do his fantasies about Liza illustrate his ideas about
self-consciousness in Part One? Even rather poor persons could afford a single
servant in the nineteenth century. Masses of them subsisted on negligible wages.
What is ironic about the UM`s servant`s name?
IX
192-193: What are his reactions when Liza appears?
194: Compare his silence with Liza with the incident at the dinner party
earlier.
196-198: Why do you think he pours out this confession to her when she asks
him to save her? What is the "very strange thing" that happens? Why do you think
she reacts to him the way she does? Why does he react to her reaction the way he
does?
X
199: Again Dostoyevsky does not describe the sex that takes place between
these two sections (during the missing quarter hour). Why do you think the UM
has specifically chosen to have sex with her? What is he trying to convey to
her? How has it made her feel?
200: What do you think he slipped in her hand? Why does he say that this
act was cruel?
201: Explain this sentence: "Won`t I hate her even more tomorrow, just
because I`ve kissed her feet today?"
202: What emotions does the UM feel in the aftermath?
204: Has the underground man learned from his experiences? What effect have
they had on him? Does understanding one&`s motives necessarily make one
behave better? Can you see any way for the UM to escape from his trap?
Dostoyevsky was a devout Christian (his The Brothers Karamazov is
one of the few great Christian novels). Can you find any evidence for his
religious beliefs in this story, direct or indirect?
What do suppose his attitudes toward Voltaire were? In what ways is he like
Faust? Have you ever met anyone like the UM? What effect did that person have on
you?
Notes by Paul Brians, Department of
English,Washington State University, Pullman 99164-5020.
Version of June 17, 1995.
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