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Existentialism in Literature

Existentialism in Literature. Objective of this presentation. To know the meaning of existentialism To discuss the main themes of existentialism To review the philosophy of existentialists To review existentialism in literature To know what we can learn from existentialists.

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Existentialism in Literature

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  1. Existentialism in Literature

  2. Objective of this presentation • To know the meaning of existentialism • To discuss the main themes of existentialism • To review the philosophy of existentialists • To review existentialism in literature • To know what we can learn from existentialists

  3. Meaning and definition of existentialism • Existentialism, in the broader sense, is a philosophy that is centered upon the analysis of the existence and of the way human beings find themselves existing in the world. • The notion is that humans exist first and then each individual spends a lifetime changing their essence of nature. • A philosophy concerned with finding self and the meaning of life through free will, choice and personal responsibility.

  4. Existentialism • Defining existentialism is difficult as these philosophers not only contradict each other, but individuals tend to contradict their own stated beliefs both in writings and in actions. • Those most often associated with existentialism failed to form a cohesive philosophical discipline based on existential theories. • Existentialism too multi form and mutable to be compressed into a line. Will Durant • Existentialism is not a philosophy but a label for several widely different revolts against traditional philosophy. Walter Kaufmann,1975 • Though existentialism is a term applied loosely to range of philosophies, there are unifying themes in the writings of the existentialists.

  5. Definitions of existentialism • The doctrine that existence takes precedence over essence and holding that man is totally free and responsible for his acts. This responsibility is the source of dread and anguish that encompass mankind. Webster’s new World Dictionary,1979 • A philosophy that emphasizes the uniqueness and isolation of the individual experience in a hostile or indifferent universe, regards human existence as unexplainable, and stresses freedom of choice and responsibility for the consequences of one’s acts. American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language,1992

  6. Definitions of existentialism • Philosophy of individual mind confronted by the changing contemporary world. Will and Ariel Durant Interpretations of Life,1970 • Individual’s existence is unique and his essence is the gradual and ever changing product of his existence in the flux of time. 5000BC, Heraleitus explained the changing phenomenon. Nothing is, everything becomes, everything at every moment is ceasing to be what it was, and is becoming what it will be. In this flux all things are in conflict with their opposites, but the conflict produces the fertile union of opposites.

  7. Underlying concepts of existentialism • Human free will (contrary to determinism) • Each individual human being is fundamentally alone. • Human nature is chosen through life choices • A person is best when struggling against their individual nature, fighting and struggling for life. • Society is unnatural and its traditional religious and secular rules are arbitrary. • Personal responsibility(ability to respond) and (self, not policed) discipline is crucial. • Worldly desire is futile as the world is illusion and progress is delusion.

  8. What is not existentialism? • Wealth, pleasures or honor make the good life. • Social values and structure control the individual. • Accept what is and that is enough in life. • Science can and will make everything better. • People are basically good but ruined by society or external forces.

  9. Behavior of existentialists • Seek to avoid intruding on the lives and boundaries of others. • Disown the pattern of universe and try to find their own meaning for themselves. They are not footballs of others’ opinions. • They feel in iron-cage of systems, but try to look at the stars than at the bars. • Creativity in their behavior. • Rejection of authority as the only authority which any person has is himself, he is answerable only to himself as well. • Responsible and compassionate. • Self-actualizing people(as Maslow or Carl Rogers)

  10. Philosophers and other personalities associated with existentialism • The term existentialism coined by French philosopher Gabriel Marcel around 1943 and adopted by Jean Paul Sartre in 1945. • Soren Kierkegaard and Friedrich Nietzsche were two of the first philosophers considered fundamental to the existentialist movement. • Jasper, Heideggar, Sartre,Walter Kaufmann, MerleayPonty. • Phenomenology: Edmund Husserl, ( Heidegger, Sartre) • Literature: Camus, Barth, Dostoevsky, Goethe, Simone de Beauvoir, Kafka, Milton, Hermann Hesse • Theology: Barth, Buber, Marcel, Niebuhs, Tillich, • Psychology: Victor Frankle, Rollow May, Irwin D Yalon.

  11. Major themes of Existentialism • Focus on concrete existence • Existence precedes essence • Moral individualism • Subjectivity • Angst • Freedom • Authenticity and inauthenticity • The absurd

  12. Focus on concrete existence • Existentialist thinkers focus on the question of concrete human existence and the conditions of this existence rather than hypothesizing a human essence. • Existence comes from the Latin “existere” meaning “to stand out”. • Man exists in a state of distance from the world that he nonetheless remains in the midst of. • Man is alone and he has to pursue his path from alone to alone in great solitude.

  13. Existence precedes essence • Existence precedes essence(Sartre) • This implies that we first exist an humans and we then become whom we decide to be through our free will or choice. • Each individual has unique existence and his essence or essential character is the gradual and ever-changing product of his existence in the flux of time. • A man’s essence is formed by his total past, to which he adds in every moment of his life. • We are sum of our decisions or conscious choices.

  14. Moral individualism • Morals not decided by society but by oneself. • Morals or laws decided by society or person in power, are all arbitrary. • Ethics is the responsible use of freedom. • Kierkegaard reacted against the tradition by insisting that the highest good for the individual is to find his or her own unique vocation. • I must find a truth that is true for me—the idea for which I can live or die.(Kierkegaard) • My Zarathustra fights with his hands so that they are free to bless.(Nietzsche) • Superman beyond good and evil (Nietzsche)

  15. Subjectivity • Existentialists have stressed the importance of passionate individual action in deciding questions of both morality and truth. • Personal experience and acting on one’s own convictions are essential in arriving at the truth. • Understanding of a situation by someone involved in that situation is superior to that of a detached and objective observer. • Most important questions are not accessible to science or logic. • Phenomenology: record of individual experiences. It is neither the deductive or empirical methods of natural science. It consists of realizing the presence of an object and elucidating the meaning through intuition.

  16. Angst • Angst, sometimes called dread, anxiety or even anguish is common to all existentialists. • It reveals the character of human life and illuminates the nature of the world. • In Kierkegaard’s conception, dread (Angst) is not fear, caused by some external threat. In fear, constructive measures are possible to remove it. But angst is an inward passion, continuous melancholy or sudden terrifying emotion. • Sartre treats anguish as the reflective appreciation of the Self as freedom. It is the realisation that a nothingness slips in between the Self and my past and future so that nothing relieves me from the necessity of continually choosing myself and nothing guarantees validity of the values which I choose.

  17. Freedom to choose • Humanity’s primary distinction is the freedom to choose. • Human beings do not have a fixed nature, or essence as other animals and plants do, • Each human being makes choices that create his or her own nature. • Choice is therefore central to human existence, and is inescapable, even the refusal to choose is a choice. • Freedom to choice entails commitment and responsibility. • As individuals are free to choose their own path, they must accept the risk and responsibility of following their commitment wherever it leads.

  18. Authenticity • One has to “find oneself” and then live in accordance with this self. • The authentic act is one that is in accordance with one’s freedom. • One should let one’s actual values come into play when one makes a choice, so that one can take the responsibility for that act.

  19. Absurd • There is no meaning to be found in the world beyond what meaning we give to it. • It is not essential that good people will be rewardedand bad people will be punished. • Anything can happen to anyone, and a tragic event can happen with anyone.

  20. Fyodor Dostoevsky • Studied individual will, freedom, and anguish. • Because of his long association with criminals, he had an intense interest in abnormal and perverted types of psychology that he analyzed • Notes from underground, the fictionized diary explores a man’s inner thoughts and struggles. • Brothers Karamazov-rationalism vs irrationalism, struggle between love and hatred, faith and unfaith, conflict between generations. Repulsive father(Fyador) and his four sons each representing a universal trait of humanity like saintliness(Alyosha), passion and sensuality(Dmitri), intellect(Ivan) and ugliness of body, mind and spirit(Smerdyakov). • Dostoevsky explores the right of a child to raise his hand against his father and by extension the right of man to raise his hand against God.

  21. Soren Kierkegaard • He is considered the first existentialist, his works were popularized by Heidegger, and others. • Formulated the aesthetic, ethical and religious as modes of existence. • He insisted on the need for individual decision and leaps of faith in the search for religious truth and contradicted Protestant rationalist theology. • The individual must be prepared to defy the norms of society for the sake of higher authority of a personally valid way of life.

  22. Friedrich Nietzsche • Perhaps the most suggestive and stimulating philosopher • Will to power (liberated Schopenheur’svulantarism from pessimism) • God is Dead and Superman is the hope. • Master mentality and slave mentality • Anything that crushes genius is evil. • Superman beyond good and evil. • How spirit transformed from camel, to lion, to child. • Thus Spake Zarathustra the future bible(Archrya Rajneesh)

  23. Friedrich Nietzsche’s famous quotes and existentialism • The individual has always had to struggle to keep from being overwhelmed by the tribe. If you try it, you will be lonely often and sometimes frightened. But no price is too high to pay for the privilege of owning yourself. • Of the necessity, partymen becomes liars. • Insanity in individuals is something rare-but in groups, parties, nations, it the rule. • Convictions are more dangerous enemies of the truth than lies. • Morality is the herd-instinct in the individual.

  24. Friedrich Nietzsche and famous quotes • The secret of reaping the greatest fruitfulness and the greatest enjoyment from life is to live dangerously. • He who has a why to live can bear with almost anyhow. • Man is a rope stretched between the animal and the superman –a rope over an abyss. • Existence really is an imperfect tense that never becomes a present.

  25. Friedrich Nietzsche • Friedrich Nietzsche studied Schopenhauer’s work “the world and will and idea” based on the philosophy of will. But Nietzsche formed his philosophy on will to power. • Nietzsche is most influential philosopher found in most of writers, psychologists, etc.

  26. Nietzsche • The Übermensch is a goal; it is what man should strive to become. Nietzsche argued that “Man is a rope stretched between animal and the Superman”. • Nietzsche thought that ‘man’ is an incomplete piece of work, waiting to become something more than just man. To do this, man has to reject Christianity “and install his own set of values which are ‘Beyond Good and Evil’… who could reject the ‘God hypothesis’, who could look the truths of pessimism in the face and still say ‘Yes’ to life, would cease to be an ordinary human; such an individual would in fact become a Superhuman.”

  27. Edmund Husserl • Austrian born German philosopher and mathematician • Developed the concept of essences and being • A leader in the development of the phenomenology • As phenomenologist interested in things as they appear to consciousness, rather than things in themselves. • Profound influence upon existentialists.

  28. Martin Heidegger • Studied under Husserl and interested in the “question of being” (Being and Time) • Individual as being-in-the world is characterized by action and anxiety and considering that world is not our primary way of being in the world. • Attempted to reveal the concealed nature of being. • Why should there be being at all, when there should be nothing.

  29. Jean Paul Sartre • Gifted playwright, novelist, philosopher and political activist. • He was offered the Nobel Prize for literature in 1964, but refused. • There is no fixed human nature or essence of lonely human being and so the individual has to choose his or her being. • This choice brings with it responsibility. • Those who do not choose, but base their lives on pre-arranged moral and philosophical systems are said to be acting in bad faith.

  30. Jean Paul Satre • Nausea (novel)-30 year old Antoine Roquentin frustrated by meaningless routine matters of existence, crimes, perversions, cheatings, hypocrisies, etc feels a ‘sweetish sickness’ called as nausea. In the end he accepts the indifference of the physical world to man’s aspirations and man is able to see that realization not only as a regret but also as an opportunity. • People are free to make their own meaning: a freedom that is also a responsibility, because without that commitment there will be no meaning.

  31. Jean Paul Sartre • Being and Nothing is the corner stone of existentialism. It encompasses the dilemmas and aspirations of individual in contemporary society. • Themes like Being, Existence, Essence, Nothingness, Freedom, anguish, etc. are explored. • Each of us is alone and helpless. Life has no meaning in itself, only the individual can give meaning to his life-by the free choice of his project and goal, and by recognizing his responsibility for the results.

  32. Karl Jaspers • Contemporary of Sartre, Camus, • German psychiatrist, philosopher, and theologian. • Concerned with human reactions to extreme situations. • It is the work of Jaspers that the seeds sown by Kierkegaard and Nietzsche first grew into existentialism. (Walter Kaufmann)

  33. Simone De Beauvior • Feminist writer, editor of many of Sartre’s works. • Women’s social subjugation is credited to patriarchal rather than biological or psychological structures.

  34. Albert Camus • Life is essentially absurd: full of injustice, millions work in repetitive exploitative jobs. • We should rebel against these absurdities by refusing to participate in them. • He dramatized the problems of violence and morality, of “man versus the state” in four plays presented in Paris theaters.

  35. Notes on Absurd • The emotional and intellectual awareness of the fact of death in contrast to the potent desire for immortality. • Contradiction between two things. This contradiction exists between a person’s longing for duration and the inevitability of his or her death. • The absurd describes the relation between a person and the world. People areborn, struggle, and die; they areinnocent and yet they suffer and ultimately arealone • Sisyphus is the incarnation of the Absurd Hero. • The realization that life is absurd cannot be an end, but only a beginning. Life can be magnificent and overwhelming .

  36. Albert Camus-The Myth of Sisyphus • Human conditions as absurd, confrontation between a person’s desire for significance, meaning and clarity on the one hand and the cold and indifferent universe on the other hand. • Absurd leads to choice of suicide or leap of faith or recognition. Recognition is the only defensible option. • I draw from the absurd three consequences, which are my revolt, my freedom, and my passion. By the mere activity of consciousness I transform into a rule of life what was an invitation to death and I refuse suicide.

  37. Franz Kafka • Kafka presents a world that is at once real and dream like and in which individual burdened with guilt, isolation and anxiety makes a futile search for personal salvation. • Kafka stands between Nietzsche and the existentialists and pictures the world into which man is thrown into godless world and faces the absurd world. • His novels Trial(1925), The Castle(1926) present isolated men confronting vast, elusive, heartless bureaucracies.

  38. The Metamorphosis • Kafka’s novel Metamorphosis depicts travelling salesman GregorSamsa who finds himself inexplicably transformed overnight into a gigantic insect with many legs • Kafka saw all life as an insect’s dream • Man is drawn into meaningless routines, manipulated by the outside world.

  39. Maurice MerleauPonty • Phenomenologist Existentialist • Unlike many phenomenologists, he affirmed the reality of a world that transcends our consciousness of it. • In his studies of perception, he laid emphasis on the physical and the biological as levels of conceptualization that preconditioned as mental concepts.

  40. Hermann Hesse • Steppenwolf(Novel)-portrays man’s split between his humanity, and his wolf-like aggression and homelessness. • Duality of the nature is the major theme in the novel and two main characters-Harry Hallar and Hermine illustrate this duality. Harry illustrates the duality through inner conflict and an outer conflict. Hermine represents the duality of human nature through an outer conflict. Hermine is a socialite and she coerces Harry to agree to subject himself to society. Then Harry murders her.

  41. Hermann Hesse-Sidhartha • Novel based upon Indian mysticism states that enlightenment is individualistic, knowledge can be transferred but one has to learn and earn the wisdom through one’s own efforts. • The hero, Sidharatha, has to undergo all the experiences like mendicant wanderer, wealthy businessman, and finally companion to a humble ferryman. His final peace comes only after he has had his full share of pleasure and pain. • One has to gain wisdom with one’s own efforts.

  42. Victor Frankl • Man’s search for meaning. • Experiences of Nazi concentration camp • There are two races: decent and indecent. • Each man has unique meaning of life, that he has to discover and live for it. • If there are suffering in life, these suffering has unique meaning that individual has to find with his own efforts. • He who has a why to live can bear with almost anyhow (Friedrich Nietzsche)

  43. Milton • Long before Camus and Satre, John Milton criticizedcountry’s govt and churches. • His works concern with individual choice and responsibility. • He considered the individuals more important than any created system such as Govt or Church. • Individual rights and free will are more important. • Govt tries to condition the mind of the public by limiting what is being publically read.

  44. Milton • The mind is its own place, and in itself can make a Heaven or Hell, a Hell of Haven Paradise Lost. • To reign is worth ambition, though in Hell, Better to reign in Hell than serve in Heaven. Paradise Lost

  45. Johann Wolfgang von Goethe • Goethe’s Faust finds himself lonely, alienated from his fellow men by his own intellect. • Faust legends feature a man driven by a quest for power, Goethe’s anti-hero is driven by quest to know and understand himself and absolute truth. • Faust features a man struggling to understand existence. His devotion to who and what he is makes him a heroic figure. Understanding why mankind exists, and in what terms it exists, is important enough for Faust to risk damnation.

  46. John S Barth • Barth’s characters in novels are primarily on quests for self-definition. • Barth’s heroes are engaged in search for meaning, a justification for life amidst the tension between the relativism of post modern thought and a desire for a defined and rational ethics.

  47. Samuel Backett • Samuel Backett’s Waiting for Godot is most popular absurdist play. • Structurally, Godot is a two-act play which is primarily cyclical. It begins with two lonely tramps on a roadside who are awaiting the arrival of a figure referred to as Godot and ends with the same premise. • Backett uses his characters to show that waiting is truly anguish and one must actively pursue the meaning in their life.

  48. Is Schopenhauer existentialist? • The answer is both yes as well as no. • Schopenhauer bit too serious student of life is influenced by Upanishads. • To him, “(Upanishads) have been the solace to my life, it will be the solace to my death” • His whole philosophy surrounds the will-the striving force mysteriously controlling our whole actions. • His analysis of the will led him to the conclusion that emotional, physical and sexual desires can never be satisfied and therefore these desires be moderated and negated (similar teachings we find in Buddhism and Vedanta)

  49. Schopenhauer’s determinism • To him, there is only one Will, not the individual wills of individuals • This idea is central to Schopenhauer’s form of determinism. • One is part of the universe like everything else, the basic energies of the universe flow through oneself, as they flow through everything else.

  50. Schopenhauer’s existentialism • Schopenhauer reader of Kant and Hegel. • But criticized their logical optimism and the belief that individual morality could be determined by society and reason as individual is guided by his own basic desires. • These human desires are futile, illogical, directionless. • There is element of choice when these desires are sublimated to intellect.

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