Arthur Kestler: "Noon Darkness" Revolution and Political Ethics "Noon Darkness" is the second novel of a trilogy centered on the central theme of revolutionary ethics and general political ethics. The problem of conflict between the extent or degree to which a noble purpose proves an average means and its related morality and convenience. The theme of the novel relates to the prevailing predicament confronted by the political parties and the leaders of the revolutionary movement, from the slave uprising of the 1st century to the old Bolshevik of the 1930s.
The noon Arthur Kestler's darkness was one of the most important political novels of the 20th century. It presents a tough and compelling portrait of Stalin's trial of his Bolsheviks through the fictitious suspect Rubashov's story. In this posting published by a new politician, Kestler explained why so many old Bolsheviks acknowledged that they did not commit anti-revolutionary crimes. The noon darkness is the second novel of trilogy - the other two parts are "gladiator and arrival and departure" - the central theme surrounding ethical ethics: whether the high end will prove a shameful meaning
The noon darkness of Arthur Kestler (1940, France) was one of the most famous "political novels" in the 20th century, or a fictional account of historical reality. Written by a former member of the Communist Party, it is a unique insight into the unstable political situation of the Soviet Union government of the late 1930s. The main character Lubaschoff combines the characteristics of the main Soviet politicians and intellectual leaders of the Bolshevik Revolution and explains the thematic political themes of his general rule, socialism, communism, individualism We are developing it.
Arthur Kestler's noon darkness and Joseph Conrad's "dark heart" is an important understanding of the real true nature of the world through the effective representation of reality, the lack of truth, or the lack of ways to promote human solidarity . In the noon's darkness is shown a story of a serious life, a man imprisoned with political crime, Lubaschoff who collided between the party's evolutionistic ideology and his own moral ideals. Focusing on his imprisonment, the story provides effective insight
When I was in college, I was very interested in politics. Then during the summer vacation which ended in the first year I borrowed the noon darkness of Arthur Kestler from my friend while driving through France. He is ordered to read and read philosophy. I am learning that language and try not to use untranslated text. I have never been bothered by something theoretically. This story is rare. Rubashov is an old first generation revolutionary who was jailed and interrogated by ambitious thugs from the young generation's steel. Implementation is positive. Rubashov went about his cell, recalled his former foreign communist who was working for the foreign party, manipulated idealism, and ultimately destroyed it was unnecessary.