Man desires a world where good and evil can be clearly distinguished, for he has an innate and irrepressible desire to judge before he understands. Religions and ideologies are founded on this desire. They can cope with the novel only by translating its language of relativity and ambiguity into their own apodictic and dogmatic discourse. They require that someone be right: either Anna Karenina is the victim of a narrow-minded tyrant, or Karenin is the victim of an immoral woman; either K. is an innocent man crushed by an unjust Court, or the Court represents divine justice and K. is guilty.
This "either-or" encapsulates an inability to tolerate the essential relativity of things human, an inability to look squarely at the absence of the Supreme Judge. This inability makes the novel's wisdom (the wisdom of uncertainty) hard to accept and understand.
— From "The Depreciated Legacy of Cervantes"
Showing posts with label Milan Kundera. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Milan Kundera. Show all posts
Sunday, April 03, 2016
Notes for a commonplace book (18)
Milan Kundera:
Labels:
Milan Kundera,
Notes,
Novels
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