Difference between revisions of "User:Robert Boettcher/Ijon Tichy"
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==Ijon Tichy== | ==Ijon Tichy== | ||
− | Tichy is the main character and narrator of [[:Category:Star Diaries, the|"The Star Diaries"]], [[:Category:Futurological Congress, the|"The Futurological Congress"]], [[:Category:Inspection at the Scene of a Crime|"Inspection at the Scene of a Crime"]] and [[:Category:Peace on Earth|"Peace on Earth"]]. Ijon Tichy has been one of Lem's favorite characters for more than thirty years. He does not have a family, hence he usually travels. He is frequently compared to [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baron_M%C3%BCnchhausen Muenchausen] and Gulliver. | + | Tichy is the main character and narrator of [[:Category:Star Diaries, the|"The Star Diaries"]], [[:Category:Futurological Congress, the|"The Futurological Congress"]], [[:Category:Inspection at the Scene of a Crime|"Inspection at the Scene of a Crime"]] and [[:Category:Peace on Earth|"Peace on Earth"]]. Ijon Tichy has been one of Lem's favorite characters for more than thirty years. He does not have a family, hence he usually travels. He is frequently compared to [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baron_M%C3%BCnchhausen Muenchausen] and [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gulliver's_Travels Gulliver]. |
===Characteristic=== | ===Characteristic=== |
Latest revision as of 23:03, 22 May 2014
Ijon Tichy
Tichy is the main character and narrator of "The Star Diaries", "The Futurological Congress", "Inspection at the Scene of a Crime" and "Peace on Earth". Ijon Tichy has been one of Lem's favorite characters for more than thirty years. He does not have a family, hence he usually travels. He is frequently compared to Muenchausen and Gulliver.
Characteristic
Tichy is one of those of Stanislaw Lem's characters who has the habit of perceiving various societies and political panels (also inter-planetary ones) that try to define "how the world is" by established philosophical systems, ethical rules or policies. He is an experienced interstellar traveller, full of goodwill, eager to cooperate and accept others' view of reality - even if it opposes human experience. He faces the Uknown in a restraint manner, although he is sometimes scared by the situation. He tries to face the absurd with reason and his healty sceptical mind; Tichy is an ideal witness of minds' aberrations and collective madness.
(This paragraph is a loose translation of prof. Jerzy Jarzębski's from the afterword to "The Futurological Congress")