'The Tragedy of Man' by Imre Madách
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A Hungarian epic drama that moves through history as if it were a stage set.
Banned over and over again, this work was originally written in 1860, only recently translated to English. The Tragedy of Man follows Adam, Eve and Lucifer as they travel across eras — ancient Egypt, Athens, Rome, the French Revolution, industrial London, even speculative futures — testing the promise of progress. Each historical moment presents a new ideal and its collapse.
The structure is closer to Goethe’s Faust than to a conventional play. Madách uses spectacle and dialogue to ask whether humanity advances or merely rearranges its illusions. Lucifer is the skeptic; Adam is hope repeatedly bruised but not extinguished.
For readers interested in Central European literature, philosophical drama, or nineteenth-century works that feel uncannily contemporary in their doubts about progress.
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