Friday, June 28, 2013

Tie Together With The Popularity Of Vampires And Viola!


I haven't read the book, but I think this guy nailed where we are, politically, right now:
Demons (Russian: Бесы, Bésy) is an 1872 novel by Fyodor Dostoyevsky. Though titled The Possessed in the initial English translation, Dostoyevsky scholars and later translations favour the titles The Devils or Demons. 
An extremely political book, Demons is a testimonial of life in Imperial Russia in the late 19th century. 
As the revolutionary democrats begin to rise in Russia, different ideologies begin to collide. Dostoyevsky casts a critical eye on both the left-wing idealists, portraying their ideas and ideological foundation as demonic, and the conservative establishment's ineptitude in dealing with those ideas and their social consequences. 
This form of intellectual conservativism tied to the Slavophile movement of Dostoyevsky's day, called Pochvennichestvo, is seen to have continued on into its modern manifestation in individuals like Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn. Dostoyevsky's novels focus on the idea that utopias and positivist ideas, in being utilitarian, were unrealistic and unobtainable.
I'm not that concerned:

Activists rarely gather life's contradictions undue any to be inserted,...
 

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