Showing posts with label 09. Fiction and Democracy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 09. Fiction and Democracy. Show all posts

Fiction, Democracy, and Freedom

 


I have always said that the degree of freedom of a society is measured by literature, not by religion, politics, or even philosophy, these three activities often negotiate their own survival at the expense of human freedom, which they shamelessly repress ―and gleefully― whenever they can. It has been said that Marx, Nietzsche, and Freud are the hermeneuts of suspicion because they invite us to "suspect" reality. The truth is that the work of these authors harbors the most suspicious interpretations of reality that a human being can encounter, if we stick, at least, to the enormously fictitious and poorly literary dimension that triggers their entire work: utopia, barbarism, and irrationalism. Marx leads us to utopia, Nietzsche to barbarism, and Freud to irrationalism. Three forms of fiction that literature discarded ―as sterile― from its earliest genealogy. Three forms of fiction that remained, respectively, in the hands of politics, religion, and philosophy.

I insist that to defend fiction is to defend literature, and defending literature is defending freedom.

And democracy...? You may ask. Democracy is the fiction of the 21st century...

 

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