Cover: Wonder Confronts Certainty: Russian Writers on the Timeless Questions and Why Their Answers Matter, from Harvard University PressCover: Wonder Confronts Certainty in HARDCOVER

Wonder Confronts Certainty

Russian Writers on the Timeless Questions and Why Their Answers Matter

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HARDCOVER

$37.95 • £33.95 • €34.95

ISBN 9780674971806

Publication Date: 05/16/2023

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512 pages

6-1/8 x 9-1/4 inches

Belknap Press

World

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On the podcast New Books in Russian and Eurasian Studies, listen to Gary Saul Morson describe how realists, idealists, and revolutionaries debated good and evil, moral responsibility, and freedom:

A noted literary scholar traverses the Russian canon, exploring how realists, idealists, and revolutionaries debated good and evil, moral responsibility, and freedom.

Since the age of Tolstoy, Dostoevsky, and Chekhov, Russian literature has posed questions about good and evil, moral responsibility, and human freedom with a clarity and intensity found nowhere else. In this wide-ranging meditation, Gary Saul Morson delineates intellectual debates that have coursed through two centuries of Russian writing, as the greatest thinkers of the empire and then the Soviet Union enchanted readers with their idealism, philosophical insight, and revolutionary fervor.

Morson describes the Russian literary tradition as an argument between a radical intelligentsia that uncompromisingly followed ideology down the paths of revolution and violence, and writers who probed ever more deeply into the human condition. The debate concerned what Russians called “the accursed questions”: If there is no God, are good and evil merely human constructs? Should we look for life’s essence in ordinary or extreme conditions? Are individual minds best understood in terms of an overarching theory or, as Tolstoy thought, by tracing the “tiny alternations of consciousness”? Exploring apologia for bloodshed, Morson adapts Mikhail Bakhtin’s concept of the non-alibi—the idea that one cannot escape or displace responsibility for one’s actions. And, throughout, Morson isolates a characteristic theme of Russian culture: how the aspiration to relieve profound suffering can lead to either heartfelt empathy or bloodthirsty tyranny.

What emerges is a contest between unyielding dogmatism and open-minded dialogue, between heady certainty and a humble sense of wonder at the world’s elusive complexity—a thought-provoking journey into inescapable questions.

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