Friday, March 2, 2018

Week 7: Story Planning Faust and death

Last week I wrote a story on Moby Dick and took a scene from the Ramayana where Rama talked with Bharata. I am continuing my fusion of western and eastern literature this week and am going to focus on Goethe's Faust and The Mahabharata. I plan to take the plot of the Mahbharata where Yudihistera answered the the god of death.
In Faust, the main character, Faust, is disatissfied with life and wants thinks about ending his life. The plot will be Faust's contemplation of killing himself. Faust creates a vial of poison that he wants to drink from and end his life. However, his friend Wagner approaches Faust at the last minute, and in an attempt to derail Faust's suicide, ends up asking lots of philosophical questions about the meaning of life and why it is worth living. Faust ends up answering all of Wagner's questions and in the end, Wagner leaves the decision to Faust on whether he wants to end his life or not. Realizing now the error in his judgement, but also realizing the void that is his own existence, Faust chooses to pursue another course of destruction and summons Mephistopheles, the devil incarnate.
Having summoned Mephistopheles, Faust asks if life is still worth living. The devil answers that faust has already experienced all the maximum pleasures of his current existence and that if there is nothing else to do, life itself is meaningless. Having realized the further nihilism of this, Faust chooses to drink the poison and thus end his life. Mephistopheles is quite happy and brings Faust's soul to hell.

Author's Notes:

The story telling will be a twist from what happens in the Mahabharata and instead of ending in a happy story where all the Pandavas live again, Faust instead will die and go to hell thus sealing his fate with the devil. I want to highlight that there is no hope for Faust as he has already made up his mind that life is not worth living. I'm not sure where else I want to go but I want to continue making the theme of my stories darker and more serious. This story will be more dark and realistic as I want to depict the human suffering that people must face in their decisions, just as Yudihistera must bear the weight of his leadership and all its repercussions.
Image result for yudhisthira and yaksha
Yudihistera and Yaksha disguised as a crane source

Bibliography:

The Mahabharata by R.K. Narayana
Faust by Goethe

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