“Dogs are our link to paradise. They don’t know evil or
jealousy or discontent. To sit with a dog on a hillside on a glorious afternoon
is to be back in Eden, where doing nothing was not boring – it was peace."
I found this quote by Kundera interesting
when I thought about Karenin, the dog in The Unbearable Lightness of Being,
and how it relates to two quotations from the narrator in the book. The first
quotation explains how “dog time moves in a circle like the hands of a clock,
which-they, too, unwilling to dash madly ahead-turn round and round the face,
day in and day out following the same path.” This is the only time in the book
that the narrator, and thus Kandera, agrees with Nietzsche’s idea of eternal
return but he makes sure to distinguish it from human time on earth, which he
considers linear. Later on in the novel, however, Kundera does give an example
of human time moving similarly to dog time. The narrator says, “Life in
Paradise was not like following a straight line to the unknown; it was an
adventure. It moved in a circle among known objects. Its monotony bred
happiness.” So if a dog lives the way humans will live in
Paradise, then they are truly our link to Eden, as Kundera has said in the quote
above. Kundera even says that sitting with a dog is like returning to Eden. The
novel also states, “Adam was like Karenin.” So, by inference, we can conclude
that, in the Garden of Eden, man experienced time they way animals do now, in a
circular fashion. We can also possibly say that, based on Kundera’s words, Adam
was not fully human because he was “like Karenin.” He experienced time as a
circle while in Eden and, since to be human is to experience time linearly, Adam
was never truly human.
1 comment:
1 of my favorite quotes
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