For this assignment, I will
critically analyse Tolstoy’s Epilogue for War
and Peace, in relation to the article Tolstoy
and Tahrir, by Erin Greer. First, Tolstoy criticizes the idealization of great
men, and offers an alternative explanation of the force that leads the movement
of nations. Next, he examines notions of freedom and laws of inevitability, and
how they correlate within and among individuals. Greer analyses Tolstoy’s
arguments and how they can be applied to the protests in Cairo, Egypt in 2011. I
argue, in agreement with Greer, that his text can appear ‘convoluted’ and lends
itself to a religious interpretation.
Primarily, Tolstoy argues that historians rely
on the power of individuals to explain events, and to explain the movement of
nations. Individuals that lead nations are believed to do so based on chance
and genius. Tolstoy criticizes contemporary historians, giving the example Napoleon
and Alexander, who he argues were not geniuses, and pursued actions that were
not based on chance, but in fact were inevitable. He explains this by primarily
defining power in relation to history. Power is not the force behind the
movement of nations; what moves nations is the combined “activity of all the
people who participate in the events” (Tolstoy, Second Epilogue, chapter 7),
that is the combination of the wills of those involved.
Tolstoy examines the will of all
individuals and concludes that every action of an individual or a collective
group of men is a mix of our free will and of certain laws of inevitability. There
can never be an absolute freedom, nor an absolute inevitability, and our life
revolves around a relation of this free will to inevitability. In conclusion,
he states that we are unconsciously dependent on laws and reason that will ultimately
limit our free will in all of our actions.
In response to Tolstoy’s War and Peace, Greer finds compelling
similarities to the protests that occurred in Cairo in 2011. She explains how
the protests in Cairo do not have a defined leader, and yet people have created
the idea of the media as the initiator of the protests. She argues how this is
similar to Tolstoy, as he states that historians are constantly idealizing and
creating a leader for movements of nations. But instead, it is the accumulation
of individual human wills that lead to events, just as it is this accumulation of
wills that led to the protests in Cairo.
However,
she argues that the alternative to this ‘great man’ approach of historians
offered by Tolstoy is “rather convoluted” (Greer, Tolstoy and Tahir), and does not entirely correspond to the
situation in Egypt. His alternative
suggestion is that we are free to the extent that we must believe ourselves to
be free and independent, in order to properly fulfill general goals with universal
purposes. And that these “general purposes remain unintelligible to us” (Greer,
Tolstoy and Tahir). She argues that
this leads to paradoxes and contradictions in the book that Tolstoy does not
clarify.
Tolstoy
has presented a sound argument, and provides a solution to an extremely complex
question of what force drives the movement of nations. He is also very thorough
in examining the idea of inevitability and free will. However, agreeing with
Greer, his argument does appear convoluted; the idea that every action of every
human being is in fact predetermined by phenomena that is inaccessible to the
understandings of humans, is difficult to follow. This idea of laws of
inevitability that limit our free will, lends itself to the concept of a
religious “destiny”; even if we see ourselves as free and act upon our own free
will, our actions are always following a greater path – one that we cannot
conceive of consciously. I think this
allows the readers to interpret this greater path as one that is constructed by
God. This can lead to contradictions in the book, given that earlier in the Epilogue,
Tolstoy is trying to offer an explanation to events occurring in history that
does not rely on Gods as the ultimate reason for these events. I therefore
agree with Greer, that there are contradictions throughout his text.
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