Books

May 2008

Evil's supreme logic

by Tess Lewis

On Detective Story by Imre Kertész.

Imre Kertész
Detective Story.
Knopf, 128 pages, $21

Auschwitz, for the Hungarian writer Imre Kertész, was no aberration, but a logical culmination of European thought and culture. In his 2002 Nobel Prize acceptance speech, forty-five years after his liberation from Auschwitz, Kertész said, “What I discovered in Auschwitz is the human condition, the end point of a great adventure, where the European traveler arrived after his two-thousand-year-old moral and cultural history.” For Kertész, to call the Holocaust inexplicable is to indulge in moral and intellectual faint-heartedness, for its logic, set in place one decision at a time, although immoral, is indisputable. In his experience, it is altruism and self-sacrifice that are, strictly speaking, illogical as they put one’s survival at risk. Evil, on the other hand, has shown itself supremely logical throughout the twentieth cen ...

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Tess Lewis is a translator and essayist who writes frequently about European literature.


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This article originally appeared in The New Criterion, Volume 26 May 2008, on page 88

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