A philosophical debate about human nature and life in a technological
civilization in the form of the diary of a fictional civil servant, this
1864 novel is considered the foundational work of existentialist
literature. Punishing himself through his refusal to seek medical
treatment for his pain, the embittered, nameless narrator engages in
what appears to be an attempt to prove to himself that human happiness
can never be possible because people are too stubbornly individualistic
not to assert themselves, even in wicked ways. One of the must-reads
from Russian novelist FYODOR MIKHAILOVICH DOSTOEVSKY (1821-1881), this
trailblazing work of modern literature offers a vital basis for
understanding much of contemporary philosophy and pop culture, from
Jean-Paul Sartre and Friedrich Nietzsche to Taxi Driver and American
Psycho, all of which have taken inspiration from this extraordinary
work.