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Title: Alienation, Rebellion, and Despair: An Existential Reading of Notes from Underground
Authors: Hamza Shujaat, Kamran Elahi, Syed Junaid Sherazi
Journal: International Journal of Human and Society (IJHS)
Publisher: Educational Scholarly Horizons
Country: Pakistan
Year: 2025
Volume: 5
Issue: 02
Language: en
Keywords: ExistentialismAlienationIsolationRebellion against RationalityFreedom and ResponsibilityExistential Despair
This paper explores the existential themes embedded in Fyodor Dostoevsky’s Notes from Underground, focusing on the psychological and philosophical conflicts embodied by the unnamed narrator, the Underground Man. Through an in depth analysis of alienation, rebellion against rationality, the paradox of freedom and responsibility, and existential despair, the study demonstrates how Dostoevsky anticipates key concerns of existential philosophy. The Underground Man’s deliberate isolation, critique of Enlightenment rationalism, and misuse of personal freedom serve as manifestations of a deeper existential crisis,his struggle to assert individuality in an absurd, indifferent world. His erratic behavior and internal contradictions reflect the complex interplay between consciousness, autonomy, and the human desire for meaning. By examining these themes, this paper analyzes Notes from Underground as a foundational text in the existentialist tradition, offering a profound critique of modernity, selfhood, and moral agency.
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