Author/Authors :
Rezaei, Tahereh University of Tehran, Iran , Asadi Amjad, Fazel University of Kharazmi, Iran
Abstract :
In this paper, the writers try to compare two authors, the Iranian leftist,
Bozorg Alavi (1904-1997) and the Polish Joseph Conrad (1857-1924), in
their novels Her Eyes (1952) and The Secret Agent (1907), respectively.
Although these two writers have different attitudes to Socialism and the
question of revolution, both share Romantic idealism and a tragic sense
of personal and social life. Moreover, they both are precursors of
modernist novel in their countries, and share a humanistic attitude to
life. However, both are intellectual elites and their relation to their
homeland is problematic. All this make possible a comparative study of
these two writers. Their political proclivities tint their views of life and
politics and thus they have a dissimilar interpretation of nationalism and
socialism, two political subjects they are entangled with. The very same
political attitude colors their ideas of human agency and the ethics of
human responsibility. Nevertheless, each writer critiques and questions
the premises of his political belief in his work, which is the most
characteristic modernist attitude they share. The paper will bring
similarities, differences and contradictions in Conrad and Alavi’s
opinions to politics and individual ethics into focus and conclude that the
reason for greatness and fame of these two writers is their attempts at
reaching an understanding of humanity rather than reporting on the
political taste of a people or time.
Keywords :
Her Eyes , The Secret Agent , socialism , revolution