![]() ![]() In Tolstoy’s novel, Anna meets Vronsky at a train station, and Anna later commits suicide at the very same station. Both novels follow a “symmetrical composition,” in which the beginning of the novel is reflected at the end. Kundera notes that Anna Karenina meets her lover, Vronsky, under “curious circumstances,” and such chance happenings are key in Tereza and Tomas’s first meeting as well. ![]() ![]() Tereza’s favorite book is Leo Tolstoy’s Anna Karenina-she even names her dog, Karenin, after a character in the novel. “A man with this sort of library couldn’t possibly hurt her,” Kundera writes. ![]() She is first attracted to Tomas in part because he is reading a book, and when she goes home with the tall stranger in Prague, she is convinced he is a good person because of his personal library. For Tereza, books are her “single weapon against the world of crudity surrounding her,” and she voraciously reads the novels in her local Czechoslovakian library as a means of escaping her “unsatisfying” life. Books are a major part of The Unbearable Lightness of Being, and they symbolize “a secret brotherhood” of knowledge and the aspiration for “something higher” within Kundera’s novel, but they also illustrate the theory of eternal return and the idea of cyclical existence. ![]()
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