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Laddar... Vi (1920)av Yevgeny Zamyatin
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Poetry about math in a dystopian future. ( ) This is my second read of this early modern dystopian classic, written in the early years of the new Soviet Union, but almost immediately banned, then smuggled out and published in the West in 1924 - so we are now marking the centenary of its free publication. The writing style is quite brutalist - ironically, like Stalinist architecture - with the characters having serial numbers not names, and being described as looking like the letters of the alphabet in their serial numbers. The writing is also minimalist, with characters described in terms of angles and lines and simple colours - a lot of white and yellow, with true beauty being found only in the action of machines and the pure logic and simplicity of mathematical operations ("only the four rules of arithmetic are steadfast and eternal. And it is only the code of morals that resides within these four rules that is great, steadfast, and eternal"). The philosophy of the One State and its Benefactor is that happiness can only be achieved by absolute unanimity as though each individual is a cell of one body. The main character D 503 is chief builder of a rocket called the Integral, through which the Benefactor aims to spread his version of happiness to other planets, as the newspaper says: "YOU ARE CONFRONTING UNKNOWN CREATURES ON ALIEN PLANETS, WHO MAY STILL BE LIVING IN THE SAVAGE STATE OF FREEDOM, AND SUBJUGATING THEM TO THE BENEFICIAL YOKE OF REASON. IF THEY WON’T UNDERSTAND THAT WE BRING THEM MATHEMATICALLY INFALLIBLE HAPPINESS, IT WILL BE OUR DUTY TO FORCE THEM TO BE HAPPY. BUT BEFORE RESORTING TO ARMS, WE WILL EMPLOY THE WORD". Eventually, the One State decides the only way to true uniform "happiness" is through a medical operation to excise the imagination from human brains, which seems to actually lead to the creation of machine conglomerations of people - though these chapters are very unclear and I found myself rather confused at what was going on for a sizable chunk of the book, which is why, despite its powerful overall message about the dangers of mindless collectivism, I don't think it is anywhere near as effective as a dystopian novel as is Orwell's 1984. I don't read a lot of science fiction, but this one is a classic. Like Doctor Zhivago it was banned in Russia, smuggled out, and published in Europe. Zamyatin's book is a dystopian satire of life in Russia after the revolution. It is set 600 years in the future, in the land of One State, where the citizens are happy because they have no freedom. Where there is no freedom there is no crime. People live and work in glass buildings. There is no envy because everyone is equal, a cell in the collective organism of the One State. The narrator is D-503, a mathematician and the builder of the Integral. His life is mathematically predictable, and therefore happy, until he meets I-303, falls in love and discovers the remnants of a soul. Can they escape the repression of the One state? Zamyatin's book was the precursor of Brave New World and Nineteen Eighty-Four. It was first published in 1921, in the early years of the revolution. It is well worth reading, and not just because it is the first satire on totalitarianism. Zamyatin has a sense of humour and a lightness of touch. Apparently he had synaesthesia, so the book is swamped in colour, odour and texture. He eliminates unnecessary words by recruiting old words for new functions. When you read that a functionary's eyes "javelined", you know just what Zamyatin means. Highly recommended 4.5* Ingår i förlagsserienIngår iHar bearbetningenÄr avkortad iInspireradeHar som instuderingsbokPriserPrestigefyllda urvalUppmärksammade listor
Jevgenij Zamjatins Vi [1924] var den första moderna dystopiska romanen - den direkta förebilden till både George Orwells 1984 och Aldous Huxleys Du sköna nya värld. Boken utspelar sig i en totalövervakad stat innanför glas. En profetisk satir över Stalins Ryssland (där boken förbjöds), men Zamjatins dystopiska visioner av en framtida övervakningens diktatur tog lika mycket intryck av väst: den första versionen av boken skrevs i Storbritannien under första världskriget. Vår tids ingång i paradigmet Big Data - där allt privatliv registreras - har gjort denna ryska klassiker kusligt aktuell. I översättning av Sven Vallmark och med ett nyskrivet förord av författaren, översättaren och kritikern Nils Håkansson. Jevgenij Zamjatin [1884-1937] var en rysk prosaförfattare, dramatiker, skeppsbyggnadsingenjör och revolutionär. Som författare utmärkte han sig med satiriska berättelser på 1920-talet. Romanen Vi [»My«, 1924] var det första ryska verk som förbjöds av den sovjetiska censuren. 1931 emigrerade han till Paris. [Publit] Inga biblioteksbeskrivningar kunde hittas. |
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Google Books — Laddar... GenrerMelvil Decimal System (DDC)891.7342Literature Literature of other languages Literature of east Indo-European and Celtic languages Russian and East Slavic languages Russian fiction USSR 1917–1991 Early 20th century 1917–1945Klassifikation enligt LCBetygMedelbetyg:
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