A Siberian village. A philosophy of self-destruction. And a community where suicide becomes not tragic exception but rational conclusion.
CONTENT WARNING: This novel centers on suicide and philosophical arguments for self-destruction. Not recommended for readers experiencing suicidal ideation.
In the aftermath of Russia's failed 1905 revolution, as political hopes collapsed and traditional values eroded, Mikhail Artsybashev wrote his bleakest work—a philosophical novel about collective despair pursued to its ultimate logic.
A character in an isolated Siberian village articulates a philosophy with devastating clarity: life is suffering punctuated by brief pleasures that merely distract from existential reality. Human beings create meaning through religion, love, work, political commitment—but these are self-deceptions. Death is inevitable. Suicide becomes not cowardly escape but rational choice, "victory over death" through asserting final human freedom.
What makes this philosophy dangerous is not merely that it's articulated but that it's articulated persuasively. Through intellectual debates where the suicide advocate consistently wins, the philosophy spreads through the community like contagion. Characters who were initially resistant—who clung to faith, love, duty—gradually find their objections demolished by remorseless logic.
Artsybashev, who had scandalized Russian society with Sanin (1907), here turns his impulse to push ideas to extremes toward the darkest possible conclusion. He conducts rigorous thought experiment: what happens when nihilism is pursued without safety valves of religious faith, political hope, or philosophical systems that might provide meaning?
Contemporary critics were horrified. Soviet critics later condemned Artsybashev as "decadent" and "reactionary"—his work as poison undermining revolutionary faith. He emigrated after the Revolution, dying in exile in 1927 as bitter opponent of Bolshevism.
For modern readers, Breaking Point remains deeply disturbing because it articulates the case for self-destruction with intellectual rigor that prevents easy dismissal. The novel forces engagement with existential questions about meaning, purpose, and whether existence can be rationally justified—questions that retain their difficulty more than a century later.
Not uplifting. Not comforting. Not easily dismissed.
A philosophical novel that demands serious engagement with the darkest questions about existence, meaning, and the ultimate choice.
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Paperback. Etat : new. Paperback. A Siberian village. A philosophy of self-destruction. And a community where suicide becomes not tragic exception but rational conclusion.CONTENT WARNING: This novel centers on suicide and philosophical arguments for self-destruction. Not recommended for readers experiencing suicidal ideation.In the aftermath of Russia's failed 1905 revolution, as political hopes collapsed and traditional values eroded, Mikhail Artsybashev wrote his bleakest work-a philosophical novel about collective despair pursued to its ultimate logic.A character in an isolated Siberian village articulates a philosophy with devastating clarity: life is suffering punctuated by brief pleasures that merely distract from existential reality. Human beings create meaning through religion, love, work, political commitment-but these are self-deceptions. Death is inevitable. Suicide becomes not cowardly escape but rational choice, "victory over death" through asserting final human freedom.What makes this philosophy dangerous is not merely that it's articulated but that it's articulated persuasively. Through intellectual debates where the suicide advocate consistently wins, the philosophy spreads through the community like contagion. Characters who were initially resistant-who clung to faith, love, duty-gradually find their objections demolished by remorseless logic.Artsybashev, who had scandalized Russian society with Sanin (1907), here turns his impulse to push ideas to extremes toward the darkest possible conclusion. He conducts rigorous thought experiment: what happens when nihilism is pursued without safety valves of religious faith, political hope, or philosophical systems that might provide meaning?Contemporary critics were horrified. Soviet critics later condemned Artsybashev as "decadent" and "reactionary"-his work as poison undermining revolutionary faith. He emigrated after the Revolution, dying in exile in 1927 as bitter opponent of Bolshevism.For modern readers, Breaking Point remains deeply disturbing because it articulates the case for self-destruction with intellectual rigor that prevents easy dismissal. The novel forces engagement with existential questions about meaning, purpose, and whether existence can be rationally justified-questions that retain their difficulty more than a century later.Not uplifting. Not comforting. Not easily dismissed.A philosophical novel that demands serious engagement with the darkest questions about existence, meaning, and the ultimate choice. This item is printed on demand. Shipping may be from our UK warehouse or from our Australian or US warehouses, depending on stock availability. N° de réf. du vendeur 9798308407799
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