Cierpienie, rozdarcie, niespełnienie: destrukcyjny eros w dziele F. Dostojewskiego
Abstract
My paper discusses the idea of destructive eroticism in the work of
Fyodor Dostoevsky. Eros is posited here as manifesting in two, opposite
forms: the Christian virtue of agape consisting in a humble service to a
beloved person, and the Greek eros which in Dostoevsky is transformed
into destructive love, one steeped in egoism and sadistic-masochistic
impulses. I want to argue that destructive eroticism is for Dostoevsky of
greatest interest, while love conceived as agape serves in his work only
as a minor, normative projection, a tribute paid to the Russian Orthodox
worldview. In my analysis I refer to Georges Bataille’s philosophical
thought to combine the pattern of unfulfilled and ruinous love in
Dostoevsky with his conviction that irrational aspects of man, his
penchant to evil and transgression can be seen as a measure of the
intensity and authenticity of one’s spiritual life. Contrary to religious
interpretations of Dostoevsky, I argue that the author of Crime and
Punishment prefers to cast his protagonists into the limbo of suffering,
anguish and distress and therefore he ultimately rejects the possibility
that human beings can content themselves with a mediocre life in which
existential complacency is bought at a price of resignation from
dangerous passions of which one could say that were “worth a life”.
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