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Home / Arts and Entertainment / Author Explores Morality Behind Extremism

Author Explores Morality Behind Extremism

6 Feb

•

Summary

  • German author's novel examines moral responsibility and radicalization.
  • The book probes how cultured citizens can turn to extremism.
  • Schulze questions the limits of education in preventing intolerance.
Author Explores Morality Behind Extremism

A recent literary evening in Pune featured German author Ingo Schulze discussing his novel "The Righteous Murderers." Presented by the Goethe-Institut and Savitribai Phule Pune University, the event delved into themes of morality, memory, and societal division.

The novel follows an antiquarian bookseller in post-reunification Germany whose isolation fuels xenophobic violence. It probes how righteousness can mask radicalization and what causes cultured individuals to turn towards extremism.

Schulze emphasized the inherent uncertainty in moral transitions and the novel's deliberate ambiguity. He questioned the authority to judge radicalization and the moral grounds for such judgments.

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The discussion underscored that literature, music, and intellectual life do not automatically prevent resentment. Schulze highlighted that literature becomes a conversation about the times we live in, shaped by politics and history.

Students' engagement with Schulze's characters prompted him to reflect on his own work and confront personal biases. He stressed the difficulty of remaining open in a world marked by destruction.

Disclaimer: This story has been auto-aggregated and auto-summarised by a computer program. This story has not been edited or created by the Feedzop team.
Ingo Schulze's novel "The Righteous Murderers" examines morality, memory, and social fracture, following a bookseller involved in xenophobic violence and questioning how cultured citizens can turn towards extremism.
Schulze's work addresses moral responsibility, complicity, radicalization, and the limits of culture and education in preventing intolerance and resentment.
Schulze views literature as a conversation about ourselves and the times we live in, shaped by politics and history, rather than a tool to dictate reader opinions.

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