Demons
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- USD 4.99
Descripción editorial
A handful of ambitious outsiders descend on a quiet Russian provincial town and tip it into convulsion. At the centre stand two men: Nikolai Stavrogin, a brilliant, exhausted aristocrat who has tried every sensation and belief and found all of them empty; and Pyotr Verkhovensky, a grinning, tireless schemer who has come to build a revolutionary cell and dreams of making Stavrogin the figurehead of a coming upheaval.
Around them gather the possessed: Shatov, recoiling from atheism into a fierce faith in the Russian people; Kirillov, who has reasoned himself toward suicide as the ultimate proof of human will; and a clutch of vain and frightened hangers-on. When one of their number threatens to break away, Pyotr seizes on the danger to bind the rest through a murder that will implicate them past any retreat — a stroke Dostoevsky drew from a real conspiracy of his own day.
By turns savage political satire, drawing-room farce, and metaphysical tragedy, Demons takes its title from the Gospel story of the unclean spirits driven into a herd of swine. The demons, Dostoevsky insists, are the ideas — nihilism, the worship of revolution and of the unfettered will — which do not merely persuade but possess, and drive those they enter toward destruction. Written in the 1870s, it stands as one of the most disturbing prophecies in all of literature: an anatomy, decades early, of the ideological terror the twentieth century would carry out.
This edition presents the complete public-domain English translation paired with an editor’s foreword on the novel’s composition, meaning, and method, a biographical note, a guide to further reading, and questions for reflection.