Notes from Underground also translated as Notes from the Underground or
Letters from the Underworld) is a novella by Fyodor Dostoevsky, first
published in the journal Epoch in 1864. It is a first-person narrative
in the form of a "confession" the work was originally announced by
Dostoevsky in Epoch under the title "A Confession". The novella presents
itself as an excerpt from the memoirs of a bitter, isolated, unnamed
narrator (generally referred to by critics as the Underground Man), who
is a retired civil servant living in St. Petersburg. Although the first
part of the novella has the form of a monologue, the narrator's form of
address to his reader is acutely dialogized. According to Mikhail
Bakhtin, in the Underground Man's confession "there is literally not a
single monologically firm, undissociated word". The Underground Man's
every word anticipates the words of an other, with whom he enters into
an obsessive internal polemic.