About This Book
A collection of philosophical essays interprets the work of major Russian novelists, concentrating on Tchekhov and his treatment of exhausted, will-less characters whose only possibility is to create meaning out of emptiness. The writer contrasts Tolstoy and Dostoevsky's embrace of life's totality with Tchekhov's depiction of hesitation, retreat, and the failure of conventional counsel, examining stories that dramatize the impossibility of decisive answers. Additional essays probe prophetic insight, final utterances, and problems in the theory of knowledge, combining literary analysis with existential and epistemological reflection.
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