
Dostoevsky (collected Works of Gide)
by H
About This Novel
This book is a collection of various texts in which Gide recommended Dostoevsky as "the greatest writer" and is a representative work of his literary criticism. As a traitor, Gide took Tuoji as his confidant, because he not only questioned the existence of God, but also used the power of the "devil" to achieve the purpose of exposing the devil, ugliness, and sin. Gide even concluded that "Dostedt is as great as Ibsen and Nietzsche, perhaps more important than them." Although Doskovsky was self-contradictory from his thoughts to his actions, and his efforts to directly clarify his thoughts from the perspectives of ethics, sociology, politics, psychology, and literary theory all failed, his exploration of revealing the secrets of the soul was comparable to Freud's research on the psychology of mental patients, and his novels "achieved a miracle."
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