LITERATURE: Leo Tolstoy

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  • Опубліковано 5 січ 2025

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  • @Milestonemonger
    @Milestonemonger 3 роки тому +295

    "NO one should be outside the circle of empathy and forgiveness"
    -- Leo Tolstoy

    • @chitownmo
      @chitownmo Рік тому +5

      He never heard of Adolf Hitler. Or the writer of the Facts of Life theme song.

    • @donaldrobinson7063
      @donaldrobinson7063 Рік тому

      Meaning only forgive women for their transgressions and adultery in marriages.

    • @I_am_Arnab_Das
      @I_am_Arnab_Das 4 місяці тому

      cheater's?

    • @xX_SushiRoll_Xx
      @xX_SushiRoll_Xx 2 місяці тому

      *proceeds to make out with hitler*

  • @prashunpcchakraborty70
    @prashunpcchakraborty70 8 років тому +1731

    Though it is hinted, the video should have mentioned that Tolstoy was one of those few writers who was famous and received recognition in his own lifetime and not posthumously.

    • @nutznchocolates56
      @nutznchocolates56 5 років тому +3

      Why?

    • @michaelmajid5142
      @michaelmajid5142 5 років тому +3

      This is sad

    • @gokurocks9
      @gokurocks9 5 років тому +122

      That's brilliant and well-deserved to him. Good to hear that happened to someone. It's depressing to hear that the vast majority of influential writers are recognized and celebrated posthumously.

    • @csmoviles
      @csmoviles 4 роки тому +14

      He was nominated for Nobel prize...which he rejected! Something that I fail to understand.

    • @syourke3
      @syourke3 4 роки тому +10

      Dostoevsky became very famous with his last novel, The Brothers Karamazov - and then he died within the year!

  • @julesprince3639
    @julesprince3639 9 років тому +2740

    Every time I watch your videos about philosophy, literature, psychology and sociology I am left with one very unsatisfying thought: there are so many books in the world that I want to read and don't feel like I will ever have the time to though I'm only in my early 20's.

    • @GoldieGoldillo
      @GoldieGoldillo 9 років тому +77

      +Jules Prince I would suggest audiobooks , if you have the proper dose of patience .....

    • @julesprince3639
      @julesprince3639 9 років тому +87

      young LaraCroft
      Thanks for your idea I might try that, though I do prefer books over anything else.

    • @GoldieGoldillo
      @GoldieGoldillo 9 років тому +26

      Me too, but sometimes you have to compromise! Good luck!

    • @nawalmustafa85
      @nawalmustafa85 8 років тому +13

      I couldn't agree more!

    • @melvintheboxerdog2263
      @melvintheboxerdog2263 7 років тому +43

      grow up to see things as they are...stop eating animals, never kill, and don't allow others to kill, any living creature. treat people as ends in themselves.
      now..you can dismiss 95% of everything ever written. you have plenty of time to read a fraction of those books that form the other 5%.

  • @ladnie9454
    @ladnie9454 2 роки тому +29

    “His body was taken back to his house and buried in the garden, under some trees, where he liked to play as a child.”
    Hrk, my heart.

  • @thatscandigirl5189
    @thatscandigirl5189 9 років тому +964

    School of life has made my insight in philosophy so much wider.

    • @anthonybrrah
      @anthonybrrah 9 років тому +7

      +Principessa Same

    • @thatscandigirl5189
      @thatscandigirl5189 9 років тому

      I will!

    • @MisterBlueSky1000
      @MisterBlueSky1000 9 років тому +23

      +Anthony Mura
      Saying philosophy is mere mental masturbation - is like saying that a car is a mere instrument for driving faster than the next guy on the road.
      Philosophy is about finding the WHAT FOR in life - what to live FOR.
      I can see no more worthwhile endeavor - and no greater gift to give a loved one, that to learn what to live for, and how.

    • @thatscandigirl5189
      @thatscandigirl5189 9 років тому +4

      Stunning usage of words, I must admit. That last sentence were truly a piece of art. It fills me with joy to see the responses my little comment spawned ^_^

    • @MisterBlueSky1000
      @MisterBlueSky1000 9 років тому +5

      +Principessa
      Thank you Miss. Maybe your comment was not so little, as it expressed the will to grow and discover - Which is key to anything one might achieve.
      It takes true power to be open and vulnerable. (Cynicism is merely fear in disguise).
      May we all discover and live by the treasure we already are!

  • @TheHelghast1138
    @TheHelghast1138 7 років тому +22

    As a writer, and someone who's experienced a lot of tragic loss in life, it's unbelievable just how much I genuinely identify with him, sincerely thank you so very much for this superb video.

  • @bolivar1789
    @bolivar1789 9 років тому +1339

    I think it is a very good exercise to imagine yourself in your "death
    bed" every now and then . To prepare yourself for this, you must read
    the 9th chapter of " The Death of Ivan Ilyich" again. Just a very short
    chapter where Ivan lies all alone and in terrible pain in his bed. He
    suddenly hears the voice of his own soul saying:
    -What do you want? What do you want?
    He says:
    -What do I want? To live and not to suffer.
    So his inner voice says:
    - To live? How?
    - To live as I used to- well and pleasantly.
    - As you lived before, well and pleasantly?
    Here is how Tolstoy continues:
    " And in imagination he began to recall the best moments of his pleasant
    life. But strange to say none of those best moments of his pleasant
    life now seemed at all what they had then seemed_ none of them except
    the first recollections of childhood. There , in childhood, there had
    been something really pleasant with which it would be possible to live
    if it could return. But the child who had experienced that happiness
    existed no longer: it was like a reminiscence of somebody else.
    As soon as the period began which had produced the present Ivan Ilyich,
    all that had then seemed joys now melted before his sight and turned
    into something trivial and often nasty".
    So as he keeps looking back on his life his thoughts become darker and
    darker. He basically realises that his entire life had been a lie, he
    lived for what the others expected from him; for money, power and status...He wasted the time given to him in this world and now there is no
    way back!
    Indeed we all must keep Ivan Ilyich in mind every day. Just consider how
    fast the time goes by.... How much of it do we really spend seriously
    thinking about our lives? Very little indeed... Because it requires a
    certain level of focus and depth, which we don't have most of the time.
    That's why this scene is a great reminder.
    So as we make the "Death bed exercise" I have just mentioned, we can
    use the very questions that Ivan Ilyich's soul was asking him.
    I think people who live well, deal with their mortality better. So doing
    this exercise regularly can help us to live and die better.
    Thank you for this wonderful lesson. I love Tolstoy!

    • @willyboundel8495
      @willyboundel8495 9 років тому +31

      I read it too few weeks ago. Tolstoy has such a talent to make us think and adopt a new point of view on our life. I'm young so illness and death seemed quite far (We tend to feel invicible when we are young) to me but Tolstoy radically made me change my thoughts about that. If we don't pay attention enough we could have this terrible feeling at the end of our life that we missed something despite social success.
      Always amazed by your great comments. You should publish a compilation where we'd find all your videos comments hahaha

    • @bolivar1789
      @bolivar1789 9 років тому +19

      +Willy Boundel
      Hello Willy! Thank you very much for reading my comment and for your message. I am very glad that you have also read that book and it had a similar effect on you. I think the younger you get that message the better will be the quality of the rest of your life. The problem is that we learn the lesson, but then we forget it again...I mean again we begin to live as if we will never die...That's why one always needs reminders. There is a great movie called " Ikiru" by Akira Kurosawa. It is like the story of Ivan Ilyich, but a bit less depressing, because the guy in the movie finds out that he still have six more months to live. He lives those 6 months more meaningfully and beautifully than his entire life before. Of course I won't tell you how:-) So at least he doesn't leave the world in regret and with a feeling of emptiness...I have read about that movie in a great book by Irvin Yalom
      ( Staring at the sun) , that's why I watched it. I thought may be you would also like it. I wish you a wonderful week!

    • @willyboundel8495
      @willyboundel8495 9 років тому +11

      Hello Lua. Thanks for the movie and the film. I just have a question. You seem to read a lot of books and you know how to get what message the author send us. Have you a special way to read (maybe you take some notes while reading). I often confronted to this kind of problem, I know that I'm reading a book very meaningful but I feel that I have missed something or I didn't get entirely the author's message.
      Have a good week !

    • @bolivar1789
      @bolivar1789 9 років тому +29

      +Willy Boundel
      Hello Willy! Oh I know what you mean! Believe me, we are all very forgetful and distracted creatures. One day you are most profoundly impressed by something, you want the rest of your life be determined by it. Two weeks later, your mind is totally somewhere else, because you got into other issues and have other anxieties etc. But I keep at least this fact always in mind! That's why I think that " repetition" is very important. I have a very simple system:
      When I read a book, let's say at page 52 I found something important. I underline that part, and at the beginning of the book, on that blank page, I write that page number, with a little note. Like: "page 52, about serenity".
      This way, when I get back to the same book later on, I always know where to find the places that were important to me.
      I read every day. But I read very slowly you know. I take time, I stop to think. I can't read one book every day. I would feel like having an eating disorder! You need the time to digest everything, to see your life in the light of the new insights you have gained and see what you could change may be.
      I also began to read with a Kindle ( E- Book )recently. Simply because I have no more space here for one more shelf of books! Of course for a book lover, it isn't the same, when you read on a screen. But still, I highly recommend it to you. You can underline passages, take notes, search inside the book etc.Really very practical.. I have a Kindle Paperwhite. It costs about 99 euros. But then the books for kindle are much cheaper. So in the end you save money.
      Have a nice weekend!

    • @benmorran2121
      @benmorran2121 8 років тому +17

      +Lua Veli +Willy Boundel Great little discussion folks, thank you

  • @Hissanrach
    @Hissanrach 9 років тому +23

    The Death of Ivan Ilyich is one of my favorite short stories, and I have re-read it several times to keep its perspective fresh in my daily life and my interactions with others. Thank you so much for detailing that particular work of his and the broader meaning it contains that we can all take so much from.

  • @skyviewproductions1145
    @skyviewproductions1145 4 роки тому +50

    Shortly through Anna Karenina, it occured to me that there was no protagonist in this novel. Instead, its world was inhabited by beautifully rendered people who each had feelings, motivations, aspirations, and flaws. Indeed, it was easy to empathize which each because their humanity was so fully realized that it was impossible to judge any of their actions harshly. Anna Karenina remains one of the greatest novels of all time due to Tolstoy's genius for allowing his characters to inhabit life.

  • @dondake3409
    @dondake3409 8 років тому +721

    The most epic WTF ending of a life ever.

    • @edgregory1
      @edgregory1 5 років тому +23

      Epic case of Cabin Fever.

    • @Desperation--Live
      @Desperation--Live 4 роки тому +20

      Makes me smile that this is what you say after watching the whole vid haha

    • @bigmack8307
      @bigmack8307 4 роки тому +10

      She must be one crazy bitch

    • @davidgil6485
      @davidgil6485 3 роки тому +7

      It's a great way of dying if u ask me

    • @aravindhmichael15
      @aravindhmichael15 3 роки тому +49

      @@bigmack8307 don’t be an idiot without knowing facts. She helped him rewrite with corrections of his work “War and peace” 8 times, gave birth to 13 children’s & raising 9 of em! Don’t jump to conclusions Mr.

  • @rome7424
    @rome7424 4 роки тому +10

    i am deeply honored to announce that i am now apart of this benevolent channel and comment section

    • @frankuvlkan
      @frankuvlkan Рік тому

      Hi Rose I hope my comment didn't sound as a form of privacy invasion your comment tells of a wonderful woman with a beautiful heart which led me to comment I don't normally write in the comment section but I think you deserve this complement. If you don’t mind can we be friends? Thanks God bless you….🌹🌹

  • @beverleyroberts1025
    @beverleyroberts1025 4 місяці тому +2

    I fell in love with Leo Tolstoy's writing and I learned so much. I read Anna Karenina first expecting that to be my favourite of his novels. But War and Peace, I just loved from the first page. Amazing writing on all levels. I think Leo Tolstoy and Charles Dickens would have been very good friends as their style of writing is very similar. War and Peace will always be one of my favourite novels. And the drama of it with Lily James, just brilliant. 🦋

  • @wowimaoi
    @wowimaoi 9 років тому +57

    Perfect timing. This man became my hero last week. I had a spiritual revelation. God bless Tolstoy

    • @tamerov2387
      @tamerov2387 4 роки тому +5

      And may he bless you too ;)

    • @omarsanchez9709
      @omarsanchez9709 4 роки тому +3

      A man who had a bastard son and refused to recognize him? How he emphasized the importance of peasants to be literate but did nothing to ensure his son was literate? Or is it because of his guilt he had for all the women he hooked up with trough out his life? Yea.... I’m sure these are hero qualities.

    • @simonk4891ing
      @simonk4891ing Рік тому +2

      @@omarsanchez9709 That's the point. No one's perfect. Just because a person makes mistakes, doesn't mean they are 100% bad, or that they didn't feel remorse, or learn and grow, that they didn't have vast and complex emotions, thoughts etc.

  • @umaprabhakar676
    @umaprabhakar676 4 роки тому +6

    I felt exactly these things when I read his short stories. There was something so real , simple and down to earth and practical in his characters. All were fit to be forgiven

  • @ctfrancia
    @ctfrancia 9 років тому +244

    I think you should do an episode on the famous Fernando Pessoa. He did so much for literature it's sad the world doesnt know more about him and Eça de Queiróz! The curse of Portugal.

    • @matheusbergamo240
      @matheusbergamo240 9 років тому +5

      I love Fernando Pessoa! It would be very nice to see an episode about his work!

    • @albuquerqueThomas
      @albuquerqueThomas 9 років тому +6

      +The School of Life So glad by your comment :)

    • @danielfreeley5217
      @danielfreeley5217 9 років тому +4

      They have a pretty strict no Portuguese language writers here

    • @robocophello2684
      @robocophello2684 9 років тому +1

      "El mundo es de quien nace para conquistarlo, y no de quien sueña que puede conquistarlo"
      *Fernando Pessoa (Poeta portugués).

    • @ctfrancia
      @ctfrancia 8 років тому +25

      We speak Portuguese not Spanish -_- an extremely common misconception

  • @Raindear1221
    @Raindear1221 4 роки тому +7

    The best lecs on russian literature I’ve ever seen or heard! Shorter, clearlier, more sapid and substantial than it could have been teached in a russian school.

  • @Vilius347
    @Vilius347 3 роки тому +29

    Lev Tolstoy War and Peace, this book actually made me cry at some point. His books are simply piece of art, it's live, you don't read it.. you are experiencing it!

    • @karaamundson3964
      @karaamundson3964 2 роки тому +2

      I'm reading it right now for the fourth time. Love this book.

    • @MrFranciss
      @MrFranciss 2 роки тому

      I have just finished this masterpiece. I almost cried in some passages. Lew Tolstoi is a genius.

    • @Mari-sy6px
      @Mari-sy6px Рік тому +1

      spoiler alert
      Were you crying when Bolkonsky died? That made me cry although I didn't like him as a person.

  • @Jotari
    @Jotari 9 років тому +124

    Natasha isn't engaged to Andrei at the start. At the start Andrei marries someone else, ignores her and then loses her to childbirth when he goes off to war only to realise his mistake, grieve by becoming detached from life and getting pretty Nihilistic before he even takes any note of Natasha...War and Peace is a big book.

    • @karaamundson3964
      @karaamundson3964 2 роки тому

      Sure is.

    • @Jotari
      @Jotari 2 роки тому

      @@karaamundson3964 Shit man, it's six years on and I can't remember any of that.

  • @gtr67
    @gtr67 9 років тому +38

    My all time favorite writer. An entire School of Life episode could be dedicated to Tolstoy's short stories. Strider - God Sees the Truth, but Waits - What Men Live By - Master And Man - The Wood Felling - Sevastopol... I've read all those stories 50 times, and hope to read them 50 more. James Joyce once said that Tolstoy's How Much Land Does A Man Need is the greatest short story ever written.

  • @esteban578
    @esteban578 8 років тому +275

    Why aren't we seeing film like this before call me old fashion but we need to introduce the public to these classics again. We need another renaissance soon

    • @SuperSerge87
      @SuperSerge87 8 років тому +3

      David Gonzalez
      Canadians made war and peace. it's pretty good.

    • @fitofight8540
      @fitofight8540 5 років тому

      David Gonzalez people dont want it

    • @ieceineint452
      @ieceineint452 5 років тому +12

      there was a big anna karenina movie not long ago with keira nightley (sucessefull so much that i had to wade through movie clips to find anything about the book when i googled anna karenina

    • @ayushsadotra9426
      @ayushsadotra9426 4 роки тому +2

      Bondarchuk's War& Peace is epic among epics made in 4 parts. This film single handedly revolutionized many aspects of the film making by introducing spider cam and what not. Check it out. Its on Criterion Channel

    • @emgalinac7678
      @emgalinac7678 4 роки тому +8

      Kids definitely need to be taught more about philosophy, politics, current events, and important literature in school. We seriously need to work on public education.

  • @NCbassfishing24
    @NCbassfishing24 9 років тому +88

    Anna Karenina and The Death of Ivan Ilyich are among the best books I've ever read. If you do read Tolstoy, make sure to go with the Pevear and Volokhonsky translations; they allow you to get the most from his works.

    • @godplayer5336
      @godplayer5336 6 років тому +4

      Yes especially anna karenina has been one of my favourite books for so long

    • @HelloSpyMyLie
      @HelloSpyMyLie 3 роки тому +1

      Falsehood. Garner is better

    • @LtotheOG57
      @LtotheOG57 Рік тому +1

      Thank you so much for recommending the translations, im very wary when picking a translated book due to how much might get lost in translation

  • @OrigamiSt3ve
    @OrigamiSt3ve 8 років тому

    Channels like these are great and need more attention. Fortunately visual history is much appealing to today's generation that doesn't feel comfort near books. These videos are a great start for further knowledge seeking.

  • @dannyoviedoalem907
    @dannyoviedoalem907 9 років тому +5

    one of the best channels in all youtube , such a shame it hasn´t as many subs as it deserves , even though is comprehensive not all of us are intrested in philosophic issues , this is material worth of sharing since it help us all to improve ourselves . Literature , philosophy , arts in general are amazing help the wolrd by sharing and liking this video

  • @TheSec09
    @TheSec09 4 роки тому +4

    I was expecting to be mentioned that "War and Peace" revolves around several noble Russian families and their respective circles. Not just Natasha is very well and deep portrayed, but all the main characters.
    Leo Tolstoy had thoroughly researched the French Invasion of Russia in 1812, even talking with people who lived through that moment (almost 60 years before Tolstoy's day).
    The way he explains the tactics, the maneuvres the unfolding and the aftermath of the invasion is brilliant and worth reading only just for this.

  • @ilial5994
    @ilial5994 8 років тому +409

    This explanation of War And Peace was way too brief. I understand that this is just a 10-minute video and you are just trying to give people a vague idea and a taste of the book, but the way you made it out in your video it may seem like War And Peace is just about Natasha, but the whole point of the book is that it is a huge, epic story, with so many characters whose lives are all intertwined.

    • @leighfoulkes7297
      @leighfoulkes7297 5 років тому +38

      Yeah, to say that "War and Peace" is about one person is just beyond insane and even if you've only read an abridged version.

    • @tisiaan
      @tisiaan 5 років тому +28

      Yes, War and peace is about the view of 538 caracters

    • @ASAPJermz
      @ASAPJermz 5 років тому +3

      More than 1,000 pages I should mention.. I'm buying this book right now.

    • @31cranes
      @31cranes 5 років тому +7

      I don't think the book's vastness is relevant here...

    • @joegibbskins
      @joegibbskins 5 років тому +9

      31cranes it is because it is about literally war and peace. The genius of the book even for the casual reader is that it approximates the feeling of real life - the way life unfolds. Tolstoy’s characters are unique and at the same time constantly generalized. When we meet them, even in a secular modern culture almost two hundred years later, we meet them as people we know. Natasha is one character in a story about a nation that is really about a nation. To narrow the story to her is so reductionist as to be absurd. It’s like saying the year 2020 is about you or about me.

  • @SmokyTheDragonTFT
    @SmokyTheDragonTFT 8 років тому +1

    This is quite apparently the most personally impacting video I have encountered in the whole library of extraordinary video essays from the School of LIfe. Thank you for underscoring the muddied waters of my own introspection. Without the guiding influence of literature, I believe I would have no clarity in my assumptions of others or the nature of my life. I just read The First Step by Leo Tolstoy, and I found it both wondrously entertaining and insightful. Most importantly, I can actually sense in my psyche that one step closer to my ideal self.

  • @divaliciouswriter
    @divaliciouswriter 9 років тому +7

    Tolstoy was definitely visionary. I have read some of his pieces and liked them from the very first page, which usually doesn't happen in my case. Thanks for making and this video and hope to watch more on other writers too.

    • @frankuvlkan
      @frankuvlkan Рік тому

      Hi Ayaka I hope my comment didn't sound as a form of privacy invasion your comment tells of a wonderful woman with a beautiful heart which led me to comment I don't normally write in the comment section but I think you deserve this complement. If you don’t mind can we be friends? Thanks God bless you….🌹🌹

  • @jbt6007
    @jbt6007 9 років тому +1

    Thank you for these wonderful, insightful and educational works. My hope is that EVERYONE on the planet will find their way to The School of Life.

  • @Aazka-dm2tp
    @Aazka-dm2tp 10 місяців тому +52

    You forgot the part that his wife proofread his manuscripts and wrote them more than 5 times to correct the mistakes before publication. She had a big hand in his works (while she also gave birth to child after child AND did the household work) and yet after his death, he completely ditched her in his will even though he wouldn't have succeeded as an author without her.

    • @gabbsdy8741
      @gabbsdy8741 Місяць тому

      really?

    • @Aazka-dm2tp
      @Aazka-dm2tp Місяць тому +1

      @gabbsdy8741 yes. But unfortunately, most people do not know.

    • @Rivers9679
      @Rivers9679 19 днів тому

      Damn, wonder why.

    • @TheDigs396
      @TheDigs396 14 днів тому

      Fake

  • @visheshabeyratne9345
    @visheshabeyratne9345 3 місяці тому +1

    Tolstoy was also an anarchist whose views on nonviolent resistance inspired MLK and Gandhi. This revolutionary side of him also tends to be softened in discussions about his life and work.

  • @nirvanakamala2809
    @nirvanakamala2809 9 років тому +5

    I genuinely love this channel so much, it feels like such a comfortable place that feels like him, also I love your voice and I've said it before but I want to kiss this voice. Thank you for all the hard work and all the videos, the video you did on art/propaganda really helped me with my French essay on how art has influenced how we see history.

    • @frankuvlkan
      @frankuvlkan Рік тому

      Nirvana I hope my comment didn't sound as a form of privacy invasion your comment tells of a wonderful woman with a beautiful heart which led me to comment I don't normally write in the comment section but I think you deserve this complement. If you don’t mind can we be friends? Thanks God bless you….🌹🌹

  • @احمدالنعيمي-ر7ج
    @احمدالنعيمي-ر7ج 4 роки тому +1

    Thank you Alain for tentalizing and encouraging us to set sail for the shores of philosophers' minds, where we can delve deeper in their philosophical works instead of reading the frivolous and shallow.

  • @jimbeam4736
    @jimbeam4736 9 років тому +3

    I cannot thank you enough for these wonderful videos. They truly enrich my life.

  • @sassaidi
    @sassaidi 9 місяців тому +2

    "We spend our lives trying to unlock the mystery of the universe, but there was a Turkish prisoner, Bahá’u’lláh, in Akka, Palestine, who had the key." Leo Tolstoy

  • @ibotah
    @ibotah 9 років тому +6

    Thanks for doing Tolstoy. I am currently reading Dostoyevsky's Crime and Punishment I plan on reading War and Peace this Summer, and The Leviathan. Keep up the good work. :)

  • @themovingdance2744
    @themovingdance2744 5 років тому +1

    I was rebellious at school as I was constantly pressured by not being academic. But went on and Studied Literature, early childhood and the individual in society. Then learning psychology and training for work 10 years later. After that Steiner Waldorf Education in the creative Arts for young children, then Language teaching. I help nuero diverse children and young people to learn literacy through painting and drawing for creative writing and English Literature. 💕

  • @alextomich
    @alextomich 9 років тому +84

    Alain, I would love it if you made a video on Kurt Vonnegut. Incredibly different style, but it'd make for a fantastic video

    • @YouWi11NeverKnow
      @YouWi11NeverKnow 9 років тому +5

      +Krizzly I agree. I'd love to see a video on Vonnegut!

    • @alexsevera7471
      @alexsevera7471 8 років тому

      How's that "feel the burn" working out for you 😂

    • @user-jv9qz2bu1r
      @user-jv9qz2bu1r 5 років тому +1

      KV is overrated - I read S. Five as a high school Soph. and loved it - I picked it up again last week and had to put it down after 25 pages - some of the writing is so juvenile

    • @nikolademitri731
      @nikolademitri731 5 років тому +1

      J Ok. Is that the only book by him that you’ve read? I’ve read Slaughterhouse Five, and it’s not as good as Cat’s Cradle, Mother Night, God Bless You Mister Rosewater, or Sirens of Titan, and those are only a handful of his other beloved books, including Breakfast of Champions (which I’d say is on par with S.House5). You’re certainly entitled to your opinion that Slaughterhouse 5 is juvenile, I’d agree to some extent, as far as it’s sense of humor is concerned, but I think it’s a bit of BS to say he’s overrated based on that book alone, especially if you haven’t read his other classics (and maybe you have, but you certainly don’t suggest that here).
      If what you’re referring to as juvenile is his outlook on life, and humanity as a whole, as opposed to his sense of humor, writing style, etc., well then I legitimately feel bad for you. If it’s those other things (especially the humor), I tend to agree, but I still wouldn’t call him overrated.

  • @charliedrosario999
    @charliedrosario999 3 роки тому +2

    I am very fond of your short documentaries. Mummy says your voice is remarkably like mine.

  • @msthang5366
    @msthang5366 5 років тому +4

    He was so wordy!!
    I still love “Anna Karenina”!! Her ending was so tragic

  • @joep.1792
    @joep.1792 8 років тому +1

    I love you school of life! Your work is articulate and always worth my time. Thank you is never enough. This videos you make drive me to wanna write, or paint, or anything. They just enlighten me so much. Great job you sagacious fools.

  • @jacobcarmichael8929
    @jacobcarmichael8929 9 років тому +208

    No mention of his political ventures into anarchism?

    • @TehFrasssaa
      @TehFrasssaa 9 років тому +33

      +Jacob Carmichael This is an analysis of the literature not his philosophy, as much as it would make a good video.

    • @RiotForLiberty
      @RiotForLiberty 9 років тому +15

      +TehFrasssaa I believe its political believes might give a different analysis of its writing in some ways.

    • @TehFrasssaa
      @TehFrasssaa 9 років тому +8

      True but trying to analyse both at the same time might lead to neither analysis being done justice.

    • @RiotForLiberty
      @RiotForLiberty 9 років тому +2

      Yes, I think we agree :) and Jacob seems too, because he was talking about mentioning it, not quite of in depth analysis.

    • @transporterIII
      @transporterIII 6 років тому +5

      It's not his fault the meaning of "Anarchism" has been maligned by Oligarchs.

  • @kevinjames2235
    @kevinjames2235 9 років тому +2

    I think Tolstoy's use of the novel can be applied to storytelling in general. Some of the best stories I've ever read, watched, or played gave me a greater understanding of myself and those around me. It's easy to find ourselves in a story's protagonist, but I think it's much more rewarding to acknowledge aspects of our character in less likable characters. It's humbling to think that we can be "the bad guy" sometimes. And more importantly, we should understand that real life antagonists are often more grey than we think.

  • @kaiftintoiwala6414
    @kaiftintoiwala6414 3 роки тому +6

    War and peace is my favourite novel of all time

  • @alwayswondering4051
    @alwayswondering4051 5 років тому

    I am very impressed with the comment below. I had the impression that our current generation was rather disengaged from reading.
    Personally, I cannot think of any 'medium' where a person can garner more of life than from the written page.
    Fabulous and refreshing comment.

  • @willtality1320
    @willtality1320 9 років тому +595

    hey guys could you do a video about fjodor dostojewski? :)

  • @desperado-k9s
    @desperado-k9s Місяць тому

    My local town "art for art sake" group has humiliated me and hung voodoo doll manakin in my likeness... Leo Tolstoy just showed me peace. omg Thank you 11/11/25

  • @verisimuli
    @verisimuli 9 років тому +71

    I'm astonished they haven't talked about Dostoevsky yet. I read Crime and Punishment when I was 14 and since then it's been one of my favorite books of all time, and I'd like to see what TSOL has to say about it.

    • @TheZarkoc
      @TheZarkoc 9 років тому +9

      +swf Have you read any of his other book, I've read a few (The Gambler and Letters from the Underground) and I have to say they are all at the top of my favourites list.

    • @juicyjesuss
      @juicyjesuss 8 років тому +6

      I read crime and punishment last year. Such a good book! Somewhat happy ending too. Who knew all he needed to do was fall in love and find God.

    • @jaliscodiss
      @jaliscodiss 5 років тому +1

      @@juicyjesuss I hated the ending, though I liked the book overall.

    • @preciousamaechi5887
      @preciousamaechi5887 2 роки тому

      At 14?
      Here in Nigeria, reading isn't quotidian in the zeitgeist of our societies. At 14 I was barely trying to know my path to right living. Couldn't even read anything sophisticated.

  • @TheLandOfTears
    @TheLandOfTears 7 років тому +1

    A compassionate fellow warms my heart.

  • @JimmyDThing
    @JimmyDThing 9 років тому +171

    THANK YOU! THIS is why I subscribed to this channel. MORE OF THIS PLEASE!
    Do you have any plans on starting a Patreon?

    • @JimmyDThing
      @JimmyDThing 9 років тому +4

      +The School of Life One note I'll make is, I bet Tolstoy would have said "Don't judge Anatole so quickly, either. This is simply Natasha's story. He, for sure, has his own." :)

    • @cliffordlevy3918
      @cliffordlevy3918 9 років тому +1

      +The School of Life I'm sure you have a plan and might already be on the way. Regardless, I would really love to see a video on Kurt Vonnuget. I nice in depth look at his writing (not just "Cats Cradle" and "Slaughter House Five"). Anyway keep up the good work, I really enjoy the channel

    • @luftwaffle96
      @luftwaffle96 9 років тому +9

      +The School of Life Hey! I am a student at Southern Connecticut State University studying Romance Languages in the World Languages and Literature department. I love your videos on Literature. Do you have plans on doing one on Latin American authors like Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Carlos Fuentes or Pablo Neruda?

    • @Josh-vg2lj
      @Josh-vg2lj 9 років тому

      +The School of Life You should. We want to engage in patronage, to further enlighten this sometimes seemingly dim world.

    • @harshalshinde227
      @harshalshinde227 9 років тому

      +The School of Life This was the best video I had seen uptil now on this channel and Alain de bottom has such a soothing voice.Also, not to forget the workshop videos do u post from carol Dweck to Alain de bottom , they are awesome too. You are doing a noble work !

  • @MrLowkeynz
    @MrLowkeynz 9 років тому

    WOW!! I have never read Tolstoy and only ever heard the derisive comments about "War and Peace" being unreadable but now I have the utmost respect for Tolstoy. His belief and mission were those of a Bodhisattva.

  • @BramowitchIII
    @BramowitchIII 9 років тому +3

    Intresting, but seemed more like a summary of War and Peace than a story about all the ideas of Tolstoy. I always found his view of history as one not decided by leaders like Napoleon but one decided by the millions of interactions between humans as intresting. Simplicity, goodness and truth, that's all that Tolstoy strived for.

    • @verisimuli
      @verisimuli 9 років тому +6

      This was just a video on his literature, not his political beliefs.

  • @peterbellini6102
    @peterbellini6102 3 роки тому

    "Now is the most important time, the person you're with is the most important person and doing something good for that person is the most important thing you can do" - The Three Questions by Tolstoy
    Leo Tolstoy: STILL taking humanity to school after all these years.

  • @c.t.1893
    @c.t.1893 9 років тому +3

    I know you do these ones for literature, however could you possibly start videos in relation to film as well, similar to these literature videos? looking at famous directors and meanings behind their films? That would be awesome! Anyways, keep up the good work, very educational! :)

  • @el6178
    @el6178 7 років тому +1

    Thank you. I feel gratititude for these animated lessons. I have learned so much from School of life.

  • @lolagreydottir6429
    @lolagreydottir6429 5 років тому +8

    Its pretty wrong that you mentioned how much he "loved" his wife despite her being"irritable" but didnt think to mention the endless psychological abuse she endured AND her HUGE contribution to his work. She redrafted war and peace 7 TIMES to correct his errors and made additions to the plot. He read her short story and used it as the base for the Rostov family in W+P with no cedit. She took out a loan to publish his works when HE DIDNT WANT TO meaning we may not have some of his work without her. In his will, he gave the rights to his works to a friend, leaving her "cast aside" in her own words. While we can still appreciate genius and artists despite their wrongs, we still have to acknowledge them.

    • @romandivalenti9690
      @romandivalenti9690 5 років тому +1

      Interesting. Writers often lack the spine to support morality, tolerance, and criticism. I know of only hints about her contributions, and thank you for your forthrightness to mention her in your comments.

    • @homelessathome
      @homelessathome 4 роки тому

      At the same time Sophia was the main prototype of Natasha which is Tolstoy's favorite character in W+P

  • @augustinedennis4865
    @augustinedennis4865 3 роки тому +1

    Wonderful,wonderful story.Therapeutic.!! excellent production. Thank you

  • @jonkeuviuhc1641
    @jonkeuviuhc1641 6 років тому +5

    I don't know why, but I always envision School of life like a marriage counselor projecting his profession onto philosophy, literature, history, and humanities in general.

    • @Maynard0504
      @Maynard0504 3 роки тому

      because it is.
      this is a terrible analysis of tolstoy.

  • @Fahim19
    @Fahim19 3 роки тому

    Thank you, School of Life!

  • @pedropereirapt
    @pedropereirapt 8 років тому +22

    Ive been reading a lot of Dostoevsky and Tolstoi, also comparing them. Am I the only that finds Tolstoi to be much more subjective and at the same time, trying to teach the reader stuff about the social status, ethics and moral etc through out his characters in a much more direct and persuasive way...
    I mean...Dostoevsky also does that but it feels like it is more vague and that he leaves me to take my own conclusions.

    • @cengiztaner4754
      @cengiztaner4754 7 років тому +6

      It may be something to do with the fact that Tolstoy always saw art as a tool to teach things

    • @godplayer5336
      @godplayer5336 6 років тому +2

      I feel like tolstoy is alot more real and his characters speak to me much more. While in dostoyevski, the way he uses some topics such as religion feels a little tacky to me.

  • @issac7787
    @issac7787 9 років тому

    I like the soothing voice of the narrator, my kind of therapy

  • @DEUSexPOLSKA
    @DEUSexPOLSKA 9 років тому +47

    Mikhail Bulgakov PLEASE !

  • @josephfernando4867
    @josephfernando4867 7 років тому

    The ending was beautiful and touching... his body was buried under some tries where he used to play in his childhood.

  • @elroy8138
    @elroy8138 9 років тому +23

    Fantastic! I love your channel and videos like this one especially. I will buy something right now. I want you guys to keep making these

    • @harshalshinde227
      @harshalshinde227 9 років тому +1

      +The School of Life I got emotional orgasm seeing this video!

    • @elroy8138
      @elroy8138 8 років тому +2

      shinyam75 they are not perfect for everyone. I agree. but maybe that's a life lesson for us all.. there cant be good without bad. I wont pick on them (or not contribute) for a few videos I don't like. but interesting about the censorship. maybe a huge fight broke out so they just blocked it - which would be fair enough. I doubt they did it without good reason

  • @katolika9357
    @katolika9357 4 роки тому +1

    I love art. I have always since I was a child loved art, but somewhere along the line I became entangled in the materialistic philosophy of our times and I chose money over meaning. Now, I want to return to what I love, to what I find meaningful, to what I believe in.

  • @gdlignos
    @gdlignos 9 років тому +3

    hi guys,
    Nice work! But what about "the kingdom of God is within you" and the spiritual journey of Leo Tolstoy? You should include his battle with the Orthodox Church and the Tolstoyan movement, as well as the "christian anarchism" movement in general.

  • @dammuozz
    @dammuozz 7 років тому +1

    I watch all your videos and they inspired me and my friends greatly. We would love to see a video on Gandhi too!
    Please keep up the good work, you are making the world a better place to be in.

  • @DoReMi123acb
    @DoReMi123acb 9 років тому +13

    this was truly amazing. Tolstoy was a true visionary. I especially like your analysis on the introspective nature of his work. I see a similarity with him and George R.R. Martin. Do you?

    • @Sunshiiineandstorm
      @Sunshiiineandstorm 9 років тому +3

      oh yes!

    • @DoReMi123acb
      @DoReMi123acb 9 років тому

      prerana adhikari good to know. :)

    • @FluffRecordings
      @FluffRecordings 9 років тому +1

      +Egie Asemota Perhaps more similar to Tolstoy than to Tolkien.

    • @jmiquelmb
      @jmiquelmb 9 років тому +2

      +Egie Asemota I've read the second book from ASOIAF, and watched all seasons of Game of Thrones.Maybe it's just me, but I don't understand what's so great about GRRM. I find his characters bland, and the plot just depressing. Like he has a fetish with violence and a nihilistic view of life. I don't complain about the blood and gore, but more about how it's portrayed. Now I'm halfway through War and Peace, and I feel I really care about all the main characters, with their qualities and defaults. To me, they are very different books.

    • @DoReMi123acb
      @DoReMi123acb 9 років тому

      jmiquelmb yeah, i can see your point, but have you read the first book? That is where the characterization really begins for the story and it also showcases one trope George uses which is subverting expectations. i.e Prince Charming being a short-tempered and angry youth with a superiority complex (Joffrey). Also, the violence is used as a means of furthering certain parts of the story but also to highlight it's futility and George's anti-war stance. Believe me, ASOIAF definitely does characterization incredibly well. Characters you start off hating due to their exponential nature turn out to become one of the most complex and sympathetic characters ever. e.g Jaime Lannister.

  • @ash7831
    @ash7831 9 років тому

    war and peace is the greatest book ever written.He is answering the main questions that in every body's mind.. "who am I" what am I living for"

  • @user-se8mi2io1v
    @user-se8mi2io1v 8 років тому +105

    It is a pitty that you did not mention the Tolstoy's evolution. For example, in his older works("Confession"), he have argued that "War and Peace" is not a good book, that he don't like it. He had radically evolved during his old age. He became an anarchist, a religious mystic and social progressist. His later works, such as "Resurrection"(or "Saturday", these words are same in Russian), are more thoughtful and philosophycal then his early works, such as "War and Peace". We should analyse his older life through his ideas. For example, he run out from Yasnaya poliana not cause of his wife, but cause he was ashamed of living in a fancy aristocratic house when most of russian peasants were sleeping with their cattle. Like Jesus said in The Gospel from Jews: "And the Lord said: How can you say that has fulfilled the Law? For it is written in the law: Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself. And look, a *lot of your brothers, the sons of Abraham, stained with mud and die of hunger, your house is full of good and nothing of that does not go to them?*"
    And also, if you can, reader, learn Russian and read Tolstoy in original. If Dostoevsky was a bad writer as writer(in "Karamazovy brothers", for example, he muss up the brothers, because they are talking in same style, without any individuality; it is more pleasant to read Dosotevsky in translated version), Tolstoy's words are beautiful, his literature style is great.

    • @homelessathome
      @homelessathome 7 років тому +17

      "Resurrection"(or "Saturday", these words are same in Russian) - actually Sunday.

    • @cassietheodora
      @cassietheodora 7 років тому +2

      FINALLY SOMEONE GETS IT

    • @tinyrick2921
      @tinyrick2921 6 років тому +18

      Really nice insight. It probably comes to the fact that Dostoevsky was impoverished and wrote feverishly, not to mention his life troubles; and Tolstoy came from a well-off background and had the luxury and education and time to write beautifully.

    • @metalfungirl
      @metalfungirl 5 років тому +6

      I am no tolstoy expert. I have only read anna karenina and resurrection. And must say resurrection is a definite must read . It has the "being inside the charecter's mind" aspect and ideas about social equity. Beautifuly written and moralistic.

    • @samuel0851
      @samuel0851 4 роки тому

      Thank you!

  • @jtaps72
    @jtaps72 9 років тому +1

    MOAR! I love your videos that follow this format!

  • @stuffedmannequin
    @stuffedmannequin 8 років тому +37

    Really looking forward to when you do Dostoyevsky

    • @alexf7368
      @alexf7368 8 років тому +2

      Same here.

    • @alonzososa2012
      @alonzososa2012 8 років тому

      It's already been made..Type Fydor Dostoevsky school of life. Enjoy my friend.

  • @sammoe1292
    @sammoe1292 11 місяців тому +1

    Do one on Balzac! Pere Goriot is a whale of a great book.

  • @BRIJKISHORESHARMATARA
    @BRIJKISHORESHARMATARA 6 років тому +4

    The greatest novelist of all time,will always be revered and remembered .May his soul be in peace.

  • @sonamartirossian7718
    @sonamartirossian7718 9 років тому +8

    thank you for refering to russian culture, not many people appreciate it much

    • @frankuvlkan
      @frankuvlkan Рік тому

      Hi Sona I hope my comment didn't sound as a form of privacy invasion your comment tells of a wonderful woman with a beautiful heart which led me to comment I don't normally write in the comment section but I think you deserve this complement. If you don’t mind can we be friends? Thanks God bless you….🌹🌹

  • @glenthemann
    @glenthemann 9 років тому +79

    I mean, I know its like 180 years later.. but thanks for the War & Peace spoilers.. not.

  • @charliedrosario999
    @charliedrosario999 2 роки тому

    It's been such a while since I watched these tremendous short docs.

  • @crisisofdemocracy8940
    @crisisofdemocracy8940 9 років тому +339

    Fun fact: Tolstoy was an Anarchist.

    • @mangosteen1564
      @mangosteen1564 9 років тому +87

      And a vegan ;)

    • @NCbassfishing24
      @NCbassfishing24 9 років тому +116

      +Crisis of Democracy An anarchochristian, to be precise. So quite different from most anarchists of today.

    • @nini.purple
      @nini.purple 9 років тому +8

      +Mango Steen or vegetarian? school of life could have said something about this :/

    • @dbrr97
      @dbrr97 9 років тому +8

      +Crisis of Democracy check out "The Kingdom Of God Is Within You"

    • @mangosteen1564
      @mangosteen1564 9 років тому +27

      +Nin Aries - Vegan :) Back in those days, a vegetarian was synonym with a person who would eat a strictly vegetable and fruit based diet (vegan diet). The meaning has changed over time. Eggs and milk where added later... and now even occasionally seafood. Vegetarianism today is a diet. Veganism is a lifestyle where one seeks to exclude all cruelty to animals in not only food but in clothing sports, recreation etc... Tolstoy did not only not eat any animal products, he was also very actively against wearing leather, against vivisection and cruel sports. 
      I also find it strange that SOL does not mention any of this... 
      One famous quote by him is " “A man can live and be healthy without killing animals for food; therefore, if he eats meat, he participates in taking animal life merely for the sake of his appetite. And to act so is immoral.”

  • @hdfjdjify
    @hdfjdjify 9 років тому +1

    Glad you guys got around to my favorite Christian anarchist!

  • @jack_amie
    @jack_amie 8 років тому +137

    Women, can't live with them, can't live without them.

    • @karenm7449
      @karenm7449 4 роки тому +1

      13 children, not surprised there arguments about sex

    • @saprissa30
      @saprissa30 4 роки тому +2

      You can live without them. Very easily

    • @KwameAmedzo
      @KwameAmedzo 6 місяців тому

      ​@saprissa30 how ' especially if you’re heterosexual

  • @watcharatphairatphiboon2949
    @watcharatphairatphiboon2949 3 роки тому

    Most important thing I learned from Tolstoy is that it is hypocritical to be mad at each other because we all make mistakes. It is also important to understand people we hate and realize we could very much make the same mistakes as that person if we were in that person’s shoe and lived that person’s life. Lots of variables and experiences shapes a person to do things that person does that we are unaware of as human beings are mostly limited to the scope of thinking that affects us or what we care about. We should thus be forgiving to everyone around us and be aware of our own tendencies; as it is human nature to hurt and take for granted people that are nicest to us (like family). Another important point is the realization that there is no such thing as a “good person.” There are only people who try to be good at different levels and a minority of people that what we would call “evil”. It’s easy to be pessimistic in life because we are biased from bad experiences over positive ones. Tolstoy is a deeply moral centric person who makes us think about who we are as an individual and society; and how we should try to advance. His belief that killing and eating animals is against the human heart has made me meditate on that issue for a very long time and although I prioritize practicality over not eating meat, I’m at least more aware of the story and consequences of what I’m putting in my mouth and wouldn’t mind a meal with just vegetables.

  • @hattie3584
    @hattie3584 9 років тому +3

    Thank you for making such amazing videos. I really would want you to make a new video in Literature, about Geoge Elliot.

  • @kardinalempress
    @kardinalempress 2 роки тому

    I just learnt that Tolstoy had Pluto in the 11th house- I am not surprised by the content in this video- thank you for this. 🙏🏻

  • @4478nick
    @4478nick 9 років тому +22

    "...became a fitness fanatic..." HA! I didn't expect THAT! Did he even lift?

    • @mgkos
      @mgkos 4 роки тому +3

      He wasn't a "fitness fanatic" 🤦🏼‍♀️ Lev Nikolaivich Tolstoy observed all the fasts of the Russian Orthodox church, year-round, most if which are strictly Vegan.
      He lived a healthy life of the farming & village people including working in fields reaping, sowing & harvesting. He did own lands & was titled aristocracy , but preferred the quiet, healthy life in the country rather than being a well heeled nobility socialite at balls in Moscow.
      Alain needs ro fact check more effectively & not lure views by appealing to the the masses with meme like language snippets.

  • @derrickgarner3629
    @derrickgarner3629 9 років тому

    I would love to see a video covering Leo Tolstoy's philosophy more in depth from some of his lesser known books. Things like religion, human rights, etc.

  • @freaksuyash
    @freaksuyash 9 років тому +33

    Hey spoiler warnings please!!! I am watching the BBC show War and Peace right now. I intent to read the books, but well you know how long they are..

    • @fernandogiongo
      @fernandogiongo 9 років тому +45

      +Suyash Shreekant Dude.. spoiler warning for a 150 year old piece of literature? lol

    • @mrsniffles5417
      @mrsniffles5417 9 років тому +16

      +Suyash Shreekant Its been 147 years and it's one of the most famous novels of all time; a spoiler warning doesn't feel necessary.

    • @Jake-kn3xg
      @Jake-kn3xg 9 років тому +2

      +Suyash Shreekant Watched the first episode, so much for trying to catch the "realism". What absolute twaddle.

    • @freaksuyash
      @freaksuyash 9 років тому

      Mr Sniffles its like poetry, no one really reads those books. Their is no other way of consuming this story. Its so bloody tiresome, the books.

    • @freaksuyash
      @freaksuyash 9 років тому +1

      Caffa Jake 'twaddle' hehe

  • @jyotidas2707
    @jyotidas2707 4 роки тому +1

    These illustrations are everything 💜

  • @MrKostyaChernov
    @MrKostyaChernov 9 років тому +36

    It's very poor description of Tolstoy's personality.

    • @romandivalenti9690
      @romandivalenti9690 5 років тому

      Will you elaborate? Curious you should suggest this assessment of Tolstoy's personality.

    • @tamerov2387
      @tamerov2387 4 роки тому +1

      Yes. He was an anarcho-pacifist, vegetarian and had his own theology of divine love and goodness.

  • @ThePeaceableKingdom
    @ThePeaceableKingdom 9 років тому +1

    I so often agree with the viewpoints you express. I occasionally like to disagree.
    But this one simply educates me. I haven't read any of these novels. (One doesn't do Russian literature if one hasn't a lot of free time...)
    I have read some of Tolstoy's essays. It is a mistake to underestimate the role of religious thought in Tolstoy's essays, as it is to overestimate the role of sentiment,... which are so often the same thing... for reasons he intuited.

  • @ddddaaaa7995
    @ddddaaaa7995 9 років тому +133

    He was lev not Leo

    • @allofthemmilkingwithgreenf7493
      @allofthemmilkingwithgreenf7493 9 років тому +24

      +Дарья Абросимова I think his real name was Лев Николаевич Толсто́й = Lev Nikolaevič Tolstoj, so you seem to be right. But in translation, especially in the englisch laguage he is also often refered to as Count Lev Nikolayevich Tolstoy or just simply Leo Tolstoy, as stated in the video.

    • @zarathustra8789
      @zarathustra8789 9 років тому +26

      +Дарья Абросимова I think that's the transliteration officially used in the English speaking world and it's easier to understand why, since "lev" means "lion", which one could relate through Leo. For example, in old Portuguese books, his name was "Leão Tolstói", being that "leão" means "lion" in Portuguese as well. The sequence probably came from something around this: Lev -> Lion -> Leon -> Leo

    • @zarathustra8789
      @zarathustra8789 9 років тому +7

      +Дарья Абросимова PS: You get the same thing with other people such as Plato (Platon) and Joseph Stalin (Iosif Stalin).

    • @poohoff
      @poohoff 9 років тому +20

      +Дарья Абросимова а Шекспир был Шейкспирем, что дальше?

    • @Jake-kn3xg
      @Jake-kn3xg 9 років тому +5

      +Pedro Silva Should make a video on Tarkovsky.

  • @diveinnjim
    @diveinnjim 4 роки тому +1

    I'm loving these school of life vids, especially the Monty Pythonesque animation, great work

  • @nikito958
    @nikito958 9 років тому +42

    You should do Dostoevsky next.

  • @cihankenar1
    @cihankenar1 4 роки тому +1

    I always loved your videos and just recently realised the Alain de Botton does the voices. Love love love the bite size philosophy you present to us with these great videos. Thank you.

  • @96oliverl
    @96oliverl 8 років тому +26

    When I was in Russia a man told me this and i found it very interesting: War and peace in Russian means woina i mir (phonetic). but the word mir has a different meaning when this cyrillian i which looks very similar to an latinum u has a small wave over it. so war and peace was actually called war and "community" or "society"

    • @AnakiBoo
      @AnakiBoo 6 років тому +2

      96oliverl or "world"

    • @1991justforfun
      @1991justforfun 6 років тому +6

      Mir or мир actually means "peace" in this context. But it also has an additional meaning - "world" (not community or society).

    • @mariya7958
      @mariya7958 6 років тому +2

      It's true. This is a spelling mistake. "Community" in the old Russian is "миръ", "Peace" is "мир", so the meaning was lost when the letter "ъ" was removed from the Russian alphabet.

    • @solstice1681
      @solstice1681 6 років тому

      Thank you for this! It really explains a lot!

    • @igorspie8241
      @igorspie8241 6 років тому

      This double meaning thing is not intentional since these words (миръ, мiръ) had different spelling when the book came out.

  • @shailesharya1
    @shailesharya1 7 років тому

    great video , thank you very much.
    here i will request you to please provide subtitles so that people all over the world could understand precious gems you are spreading, as you speak fast it will be much much helpful.

    • @frankuvlkan
      @frankuvlkan Рік тому

      Hi Shailesh I hope my comment didn't sound as a form of privacy invasion your comment tells of a wonderful woman with a beautiful heart which led me to comment I don't normally write in the comment section but I think you deserve this complement. If you don’t mind can we be friends? Thanks God bless you….🌹🌹

  • @Lars19945
    @Lars19945 9 років тому +7

    James Joyce next! wonderful video guys!

  • @mhcmhco
    @mhcmhco 9 років тому

    Wow this is perfect timing. I'm reading part of War and Peace this week.

  • @emilieher8332
    @emilieher8332 8 років тому +5

    can you please make an episode on Charles Bukowski? 😊

  • @jmm1233
    @jmm1233 9 років тому

    war and peace , should have been about the danger for nukes and past regrets , like the legend of ED-E on his journey of self realization in the Divide whos only friend is the lone courier , delivering a message of peace to a man of war

  • @V1CCZ3XX
    @V1CCZ3XX 9 років тому +5

    Fancy making a video of Emil Cioran?

  • @volodymyrsol9632
    @volodymyrsol9632 9 років тому +2

    Great request to make video on Samuel Beckett!