Notes from Underground
Notes from Underground
The unnamed narrator, "too conscious" of his thoughts, leads to a world of self-criticism and indecision. Society's burdensome expectations push him away from the world and into the underground. His reflections on the nature of society and the stupidity of the "normal man" lead to his passionate, heartfelt critique on the notion of a social utopia.
Mankind is innately irrational, and action with any level of certainty reflects this irrational nature. This reasoning leads to a push toward "inertia," an intentional omission of any action whatsoever as a superior choice to any uninformed action. Does the choice toward inertia lead to some sort of enlightenment for the narrator? Or is there something else that his withdrawal into the underground reveals about the nature of humanity altogether?
A staple in philosophy and literature classes alike, Dostoevsky's pivotal treatise continues to inspire and confound readers from high school to college and beyond. The classic is presented here in its traditional form, designed for ease of reading. Perhaps his most revolutionary work, Dostoevsky's Notes from Underground challenges readers to question the very foundation they stand on.