Hey people,
I'm new here so you'll have to forgive me if I'm not completely on terms with the intricate precepts that seem to circumscribe every unique forum.
Anyway, I'm in the process of writing an essay on revenge in literature, and naturally I’d like to do some research first. I’ve scoured trough all of the different sections in my hometowns library (Stockholms library that is) and not even in the big library we have here I couldn’t find anything but one measly non-fiction book on revenge, and that one was out on top of that.
Now, of course I haven’t looked at EVERY book in the entire library, that would take years, but I’ve used the search-engine, and I fear that herein lays the problem. The search-engine is far from perfect and only seems to search on books where the main title contains revenge or its synonyms.
Now I know that there’s some philosophers dealing with revenge in some elaborate way, there’s got to be. Maybe not an entire book in it, but at least a good deal or a few chapters. I think Schopenhauer talks about it somewhere, but I’m not sure, any ideas on this? Nietzsche is prone to cover it; I like him, but have only read good collections of his writings and can’t recall any topics of revenge in there.
So feel free to enlighten me on this matter! Name any famous or just remotely famous philosophers.
And also, if you have any other good tips on non-fiction essays or books that deal with revenge in literature, please indulge me. They need not be only philosophy.
The books I’m focusing on in this essay will be The Iliad, The Divine Comedy, Icelandic tales, Moby Dick and Edgar Poe’s A Cask of Amontillado.
Cheers!
Hampus

