47 pages 1 hour read

Arthur Koestler

Darkness at Noon

Fiction | Novel | Adult | Published in 1940

A modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.

Themes

Power and Suffering: Who has the right to kill and for what reasons?

The book’s epigraphs—one by Machiavelli and one by Dostoevsky—establish the central theme of the book, which is an exploration of the relationship between power and moral decency. The Machiavelli excerpt, from Discorsi, explains the necessity of killing off one’s predecessor, as well as the descendants of one’s predecessor, if one is to remain in power. The brutal and Machiavellian logic of power is juxtaposed with the call to moral decency implied by the Dostoevsky excerpt, from Crime and Punishment, which asserts that “one cannot live quite without pity.” Rubashov’s attempt to reconcile his responsibility to carry out the goals of a bloody revolution he helped engender—a responsibility that seems to require strict adherence to Machiavellian principles—with his individual moral responsibility to the people the revolution was meant to help is what drives the book as a whole. 

Related to this theme is the question of the “meaning of suffering” (259). In the last hours of his life, Rubashov finds he wants to explore “the difference between suffering which made sense and senseless suffering” (259). This question of suffering and what it is for underlies the larger question of the relationship between power and decency, particularly in relation to state-sanctioned imprisonment, torture, and murder. What ends are worth the cost of human suffering, and how much suffering is necessary?

Related Titles

By Arthur Koestler

SuperSummary Logo
Plot Summary
Arthur Koestler
Guide cover placeholder