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Susan Bistrican

Quotations on Dostoevsky as a writer - 0 views

  • “Russia’s evil genius,” -- Maxim Gorky (1905)
  • Henry James described Dostoevsky’s works as “baggy monsters” and “fluid puddings”, with a profound “lack of composition” and a “defiance of economy and architecture.
  • And to "CRIME & PUNISHMENT"... "Raskolnikov lived his true life when he was lying on the sofa in his room, deliberating not at all about the old woman, nor even as to whether it is or is not permissible at the will of one man to wipe from the face of the earth another, unnecessary and harmful, man, but whether he ought to live in Petersburg or not, whether he ought to accept money from his mother or not, and on other questions not at all relating to the old woman. And then -- in that region quite independent of animal activities -- the question of whether he would or would not kill the old woman was decided. The question was decided... when he was doing nothing and was only thinking, when only his consciousness was active: and in that consciousness tiny, tiny alterations were taking place. It is at such times that one needs the greatest clearness to decide correctly the questions that have arisen, and it is just then that one glass of beer, or one cigarette, may prevent the solution of the question, may postpone the decision, stifle the voice of conscience and prompt a decision of the question in favor of the lower, animal nature -- as was the case with Raskolnikov. Tiny, tiny alterations -- but on them depend the most immense and terrible consequences." -- Leo Tolstoy on Dostoevsky's Raskolnikov
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    Dostoevsky's work is received differently among his critics who don't always enjoy his work. Though some critics believe that his work is of aesthetic value, the prevailing critique that it is very "Russian" connotes that his work is sometimes macabre and always depressing.
Susan Bistrican

Pre-Crime and Punishment | Endless Innovation | Big Think - 0 views

  • One of the most striking facts about the recent Oslo massacre and bombing by an extremist 32-year-old Norwegian was the sheer amount of pre-meditation that went into the grisly act.
  • There is somehow an unsettling notion that all of these senseless deaths could have been prevented had all the facts been considered ahead of time.
  • If Dostoevsky were to have written his masterpiece Crime and Punishment in the 21st century, Fyodor Mikhailovich - himself accused of a crime and sent to a firing squad in Siberia - would surely have reversed the plot line of the story. The inspector Porfiry would surely have detected Raskolnikov hours - if not days - before his murder of the old pawnbroker in her St. Petersburg apartment. Instead of Raskolnikov slowly but surely submitting to the guilt and terror of having commited the crime after the fact, he would have surely posted his Nietzschean superman manifesto online -- and maybe even tweeted about it -- a few hours beforehand. Without a single violent act being committed, the police authorities would have initiated his arrest and put his eventual Siberian exile into motion. But at what cost to the moral fabric of society?
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    An article discussion the notion of "pre-crime" as referenced in Philip K. Dick's _The Minority Report_. The writer argues that if C&P were written in the 21st century, it could be possible to have stopped the crime before it was committed. This is also in relation to the recent terrorist attacks in Oslo, Norway and Anders Behring Breivik's premeditation of the crime.
Susan Bistrican

Young Writers Pick Up Mantle Of Russia's Rich Literary Tradition - 0 views

    • Susan Bistrican
       
      Russia's literary tradition is still strong today. Read through the excerpts of these poems in English. Listen to then in Russian--can you pick out rhythm and metre? 
  • An odd lost day. I see no sense in it. It reveals nothing, not a single sign. The spies are sleeping, mouths full of water. Winter has come, so much like fall, and things are as fruit after the frostthrown against the ground. Winter has come, so much like fall. Wheels slip right onto axles, as they did Long ago, but where are they rolling to?
Susan Bistrican

Comparison paper example - 1 views

Use my comparison paper as an example for comparing Crime and Punishment to a philosophical work of your choice. S. Bistrican, 2006 Redemption through Suffering: Reading Crime and Punishmen...

comparison philosophy Dostoevsky Unamuno

started by Susan Bistrican on 27 Jul 11 no follow-up yet
Susan Bistrican

The Stream of Consciousness Technique - 0 views

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    "One of the most important choices an author faces when choosing a point of view is the ability to manipulate the distance between the novel's characters and the reader. Early writers of fiction had mostly limited themselves to presenting a character's thoughts and feelings through action or dialogue with other characters."
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