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Title: CRIME AND PUNISHMENT Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoevsky (1821-1881)


1
CRIME AND PUNISHMENTFyodor Mikhailovich
Dostoevsky (1821-1881)
2
Nineteenth-Century Russia
  • major upheaval, political uncertainty and war
  • Napoleonic Wars 1803-1815
  • Fyodor Dostoevsky born 1821
  • Czars Nicholas I and Alexander II
  • Nihilists

3
Biographical Information
  • family background- middle class (had once
    achieved nobility but then fallen into decline)
  • poverty, gambling addiction (Marmeladov?)
  • strained relationship with father
  • temperamental "He was almost pathologically high
    strung, morose, suspicious... either sullen and
    silent or else outspoken and polemical.
  • epileptic- man as "the sick animal
  • joined a group of Christian socialist
    intellectuals, arrested, sentenced to 8 years of
    hard labor in Siberia, then death by firing
    squad, reprieved by the czar, then 4 years of
    Siberia and 4 years in Russian army

4
The Mystery of Man
  • Romantic vision of man as a unique creature
    composed of conflicting elements
  • "Our world is the purgatory of heavenly spirits
    darkened by sinful thoughts."
  • sanctification through suffering
  • the concept of the double
  • Romantic hero presented qualities of revolt,
    cynicism, and moral flaw in intelligent and
    attractive light

5
Crime and Punishment
  • published in 1866 as a monthly serial in a
    Russian literary journal
  • Can evil means justify honorable ends?
  • Who is the real criminal?
  • Character as mystery

6
Purposes
  • Expose of social conditions in 19th cent. Russia
  • Satirical analysis of liberal and radical
    politics
  • Religious call for redemption through suffering
  • Study of the nature of good and evil, intellect
    and emotion
  • Psychological account for crime, search for motive

7
Robert Louis Jackson Dialogues with Dostoevsky.
"Dostoevsky," he continues, "has become an
icon--in some respects a cliche--for
twentieth-century self-consciousness to know him
has been to know ourselves and our century."
8
Author Profile
  • Inherent in Dostoevskys literary canon is the
    primacy of the freedom of the individual.
  • He argued in The Double and other works that the
    problems of society were caused by the absence of
    freedom humankind had been overcome by the
    impact of human institutionsthe church, the
    state, and economic structuresand by the assumed
    beliefs in God and in economic and social values.

9
Author Profile cont.
  • SO - Dostoevsky advanced a radical philosophy in
    which he condemned encumbrances to freedom.
  • He maintained that the so-called laws of nature
    did not exist sustaining a belief in these laws
    would inevitably result in the restriction of
    freedom.
  • It was only through unbridled and anarchical
    freedom that the individual would be totally free
    and thus recognize his or her own identity.

10
Author Profile cont.
  • This condition would preclude all forms of ethics
    except for a hedonistic ethics based on the
    interests of the self.
  • Dostoevsky recognized the anarchical
    ramifications of his argument and attempted
    unsuccessfully to address them in Crime and
    Punishment and The Brothers Karamazov.
  • If truth does not exist, there is no basis for
    ethical principles.

11
Crime and Punishment
  • In this novel Dostoevsky brings to a high pitch
    the intellectual and emotional conflicts of human
    beings.
  • Raskolnikovs way of thinking, his sense of
    superiority over other human beings, is
    brilliantly dramatized at the same time that
    Dostoevsky reveals his isolation, his moral
    vacuity, and his inability, despite possessing
    great intellect, to attain a sense of humanity.
  • In this novel Dostoevsky profoundly questions the
    value of human intellect apart from emotional,
    indeed religious, feelings.

12
Intellect- Raskolnikov and Luzhin
  • Both men have projects that fail and both blame
    the failure on a blunder a mere mistake and
    see nothing else blameworthy in what they have
    done.
  • In both men, pure intellect dominates without the
    softer human emotion.

13
After Crime and Punishment
  • In much of his subsequent work Dostoevsky probes
    deeply into human compulsiveness and into the
    sins that human beings commit against one
    another.
  • Distrustful of purely rationalistic and political
    panaceas (an attitude that was, in part, a
    reaction against his early radicalism), he
    stresses compassion for human beings and the
    inevitability of suffering.

14
Nietzsches Superman
See notes for explanation.
15
nihilism
  • 1. An extreme form of skepticism that denies all
    existence.
  • 2. A doctrine holding that all values are
    baseless and that nothing can be known or
    communicated.
  • A diffuse, revolutionary movement of mid
    19th-century Russia that scorned authority and
    tradition and believed in reason, materialism,
    and radical change in society and government
    through terrorism and assassination.

16
nihilism
  • It is a philosophical position developed in
    Russia in the 1850s and 1860s, known for
    negating more, in the words of Lebezyatnikov.
  • It rejected family and societal bonds and
    emotional and aesthetic concerns in favor of a
    strict materialism, or the idea that there is no
    mind or soul outside of the physical world.

17
utilitarianism
  • Linked to nihilism is utilitarianism, or the idea
    that moral decisions should be based on the rule
    of the greatest happiness for the largest number
    of people. (56)
  • Raskolnikov originally justifies the murder of
    Alyona on utilitarian grounds, claiming that a
    louse has been removed from society.
  • Whether or not the murder is actually a
    utilitarian act, Raskolnikov is certainly a
    nihilist completely unsentimental for most of
    the novel, he cares nothing about the emotions of
    others.
  • Similarly, he utterly disregards social
    conventions that run counter to the austere
    interactions that he desires with the world.
    However, at the end of the novel, as Raskolnikov
    discovers love, he throws off his nihilism.
    Through this action, the novel condemns nihilism
    as empty.

18
Setting-a social narrative
  • St. Petersburg misery
  • Raskolnikov is a child of that misery, patently
    belonging to the world of the insulted and
    injured, though in him the humility and
    submissiveness of that worlds human mixture are
    turned inside out.
  • He is the first of its inhabitants to attempt its
    redemption by making a bid, in however futile and
    hideous a fashion, for freedom and power.

19
Russian meanings
Name Word Meaning (in Russian)
Rodion Romanovich Raskolnikov raskol a schism, or split "raskolnik" is "one who splits (doppleganger)
Pyotr Petrovich Luzhin luzha a puddle
Dmitri Prokofych Razumikhin razum reason, intelligence
Alexander Grigorievich Zamyotov zametit to notice, to realize
Semyon Zakharovich Marmeladov marmelad marmalade/jam
Arkady Ivanovich Svidrigailov Svidrigailo a Lithuanian prince
20
More than just one crime
  • The novel contains many examples of crime or
    transgression translated from the Russian
    prestuplenie
  • Raskolnikov, Sonya, Luzhin, Svidrigailov
  • All of these characters engage in transgressions
    as a means to an end

21
Plot structure
  • Parts I-III present the predominantly rational
    and proud Raskolnikov
  • the progressive death of the first ruling
    principle of his character
  • point of change in the middle of the novel
  • Parts IV-VI the emerging "irrational" and humble
    Raskolnikov
  • progressive birth of the new ruling principle

22
Monomania and malaise and ennui
  • Monomania pathological obsession with one idea
    or subject intent concentration on or
    exaggerated enthusiasm for a single subject or
    idea (re murder of pawnbroker and Lizaveta) (23)
  • Malaise a vague feeling of bodily discomfort,
    as at the beginning of an illness a general
    sense of depression or unease (Rs pathological
    condition or soul-sickness?)
  • Ennui (Fr. boredom) listlessness and
    dissatisfaction resulting from lack of interest
    boredom (sensuality as a flight from it
    Svidrigaylov)

23
Three thematic elements
  • Primary theme of Raskolnikovs crime and its
    consequences
  • Minor theme of the lowly and good Marmeladovs
  • Minor theme of the wealthy immoralist
    Svidrigaylov
  • Latent theme right to violent rebellion

24
Sacrifice
  • Many examples of sacrifice / self sacrifice
  • In general, Dostoevsky emphasizes the ironic
    ineffectuality of the sacrifices being made.
  • Sonya for the Marmeladovs, Lizaveta for her
    sister, Dunya for her mother and brother,
    Raskolnikov for the sake of a theory

25
Suffering
  • Suffering is a major component of the novel.
  • The characters are citizens of St. Petersburg
    poor and miserable and almost without
    exception, they suffer
  • Some of the characters seem to need to suffer
    Marmeladov (18-19), Katerina (martyr?), Mikolka
  • There is a connection between piety and the
    acceptance of suffering Sonya, Lizaveta,
    Mikolka
  • What does suffering have to with Raskolnikov in
    the Epilogue?

26
Suffering
  • Porfiry says to Raskolnikov, Do you, Rodion
    Romanovich, know what some of these people mean
    by suffering?. . . It is not suffering for
    somebodys sake, but simply suffering is
    necessary the acceptance of suffering, that
    means, and if it is at the hands of the
    authorities, so much the better (VI, 2).

27
Moral Standards
  • The moral standards in the novel are Christian.
  • They are represented by Sonya, Razumikhin, and
    Porfiry although never stated directly by any
    of them.
  • Christian morality / these characters recognize
    crime and find no excuse for wrongdoing. No
    class of man is exempt all men must accept
    responsibility.

28
Lazarus
  • After learning that Alyona will be home alone at
    7 oclock, he goes like a man condemned to
    death (I,5).
  • On his way to murder Alyona, he compares himself
    to a man going to execution
  • Before his encounter in the tavern with Zamyotov,
    he thinks of a condemned man given the choice to
    die or live on a hands breadth of ground
    (II,6).
  • The story of Lazarus brought back from the dead
    becomes an important part of the story.

29
Lazarus
  • Porfiry first mentions Lazarus A-a-and, do you
    believe in the raising of Lazarus? (III,5)
  • Raskolnikov asks Sonya to read the story of
    Lazarus
  • Raskolnikovs resurrection / return to life /
    renewal occurs in the Epilogue or at least ends
    there. Like Lazarus, it may be connected to the
    fourth day.

30
A modern case
  • Porfiry a modern contemporary case (385)
    a spiritual and mental self-division and
    self-contradiction
  • Problematical nature of modern personality and of
    its tortuous efforts to stem the disintegration
    threatening it
  • The search for the true cause (1) ideas
    bearing on the nature of crime and its relation
    to psychic illness (2) ideas about two kinds of
    human beings (ordinary and extraordinary) (3)
    ideas concerning the supernal value of suffering
    and the promise of deliverance in Christ

31
TEXT - CRIMINALITY
  • PART ONE CHAPTER SIX (p. 54-7 in my book)
  • Superstitious events
  • PART ONE CHAPTER SIX (p. 60-1 in my book)
  • Nature of crime/criminal
  • PART THREE CHAPTER FIVE (p. 216-225 in my book)
  • Is there such a thing as crime?
  • PART FOUR CHAPTER FIVE (p. 286-290 in my book)
  • Porfiry on crime

32
CHARACTERS
33
Characters
  • Rodion Romanovitch Raskolnikov (ROH-dyon
    roh-MAH-noh-vihch ras- KOL-nih-kov), called
    Rodya, a psychologically complex young law
    student who murders not for wealth but as an
    experiment, to see if he is one of those who can
    circumvent societys restrictions.
  • Impoverished and weakened by illness and hunger,
    he decides to rid society of a worthless person
    in order to preserve his genius for posterity, to
    relieve his devoted mother and sister from
    compromising themselves, and to prove that he is
    above conscience.

34
Characters
  • Pulcheria Alexandrovna (pewl- CHEH-ryah
    ah-lehk-SAHN-drov-nah), his long- suffering
    mother, whose faith in her son sustains her but
    whose mind gives way under the strain of his deed
    and guilt.
  • A handsome, middle-aged woman of distinction, a
    widow who has supported her family and urged her
    son to make his way in life, Pulcheria is a study
    of motherhood thwarted, a woman tortured by her
    inability to fathom her favorites depravity.

35
Characters
  • Avdotya Romanovna (ahv-DOT-yah roh-MAH-nov-nah),
    called Dounia (DEW-nyah), her daughter and the
    younger sister who has aided in her mothers
    effort to make something of her brother through
    working and skimping.
  • A mirror of her mothers fortitude and faith,
    Dounia is the beautiful, impoverished, clear-
    sighted savior of her family.

36
Characters
  • Dmitri Prokofitch Razumihin (DMIH-tree
    proh-KOH-fihch rah-zew- MEE-hihn), Raskolnikovs
    devoted friend.
  • Enamored of Dounia, he is the savior of the
    family honor. Like Dounia, he has all the normal
    responses of a generous nature and works
    unceasingly to discover and repair the tragic
    situation of his friend. Affianced to the
    beautiful Dounia, he founds a publishing company
    to aid the hapless girl, mother, and brother.
  • He is one of the few characters with a sense of
    humor his good deeds lighten a psychologically
    gloomy and depth-insighted plot.

37
Characters
  • Sofya Semyonovna Marmeladov (soh- FYAH
    seh-MYOH-nov-nah mahr-meh- LAH-dov), called
    Sonia, the daughter of a drunken clerk and
    stepdaughter of the high-strung Katerina
    Ivanovna.
  • From gratitude, the benevolent though soiled
    child of the streets comforts the murderer and
    supports him in his transgressions so that he
    finally will confess. Forced to support her
    father, her stepmother, and their three children,
    she remains unsullied, and her spirit transcends
    these morbid conditions.

38
Characters
  • Arkady Ivanovitch Svidrigailov (ahr- KAH-dee
    ee-VAH-noh-vihch svih-drih- GAY-lov), the
    sensualist in whose house Dounia had been a
    governess. He is both the would-be seducer and
    savior of Dounia, and through her of Sonias
    orphaned half sisters and brother, when he gives
    her money as atonement for his conduct.
  • A complicated character, sometimes considered,
    with Raskolnikov, one of the alter egos of the
    writer, he is obsessed by guilt and driven by
    libido.

39
Characters
  • Porfiry Petrovitch (pohr-FIH- ree
    peh-TROH-vihch), a brilliant detective more
    interested in the rehabilitation than the
    prosecution of the murderer.
  • Somewhat disturbed and neurotic himself, Porfiry
    seconds Sonias influence and causes Raskolnikov
    to confess his crime and thus begin his
    redemption.
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