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Susan Bistrican

Crime and Punishment Suffering Quotes - 0 views

  • [Raskolnikov] had to tell her [Sonia] who had killed Lizaveta. He knew the terrible suffering it would be to him and, as it were, brushed away the thought of it. (5.4.1) Raskolnikov knows that confessing, the act of speaking his crimes, causes him to suffer – yet, he can't stop doing it. He needs to tell. The suffering of telling is less than the suffering of not telling.
  • [Raskolnikov:] "They say it is necessary for me to suffer! What's the object of these senseless sufferings? Shall I know any better what they are for, when I am crushed by hardships and idiocy, and weak as an old man after twenty years' penal servitude?" (6.8.75) Here Raskolnikov is questioning the high premium everybody places on suffering as he debates whether or not to turn himself in, and submit to prison. Also notice that he thinks he'll get at least twenty years in prison, but he only gets eight.
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    Quotes and explications on Raskolnikov and the implications of his suffering, prior and post-murdering Lizeveta and her sister.
Susan Bistrican

The Ethics of Prostitution « A Philosopher's Blog - 0 views

  • One reason often given as to why prostitution is immoral is that it tends to involve coercion. In most cases, people do not freely decide to become prostitutes. In some cases, they are driven to the profession by desperation and a lack of other opportunities for employment.
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    A moral discussion on the ethics of prostitution by a WordPress blogger. In the text, Sonya is coerced into prostitution because her family is too poor and there are a lack of jobs, as this blogger points out as an argument of justification for becoming a prostitute.
Susan Bistrican

Moral Skepticism (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy) - 0 views

  • “Moral Skepticism” names a diverse collection of views that deny or raise doubts about various roles of reason in morality. Different versions of moral skepticism deny or doubt moral knowledge, justified moral belief, moral truth, moral facts or properties, and reasons to be moral.
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    Definition of moral skepticism, a philosophical idea that is considered to be corrupted in the text.
Susan Bistrican

Alienation: Encyclopedia of Psychology - 0 views

  • Alienation is a powerful feeling of isolation and loneliness, and stems from a variety of causes. Alienation may occur in response to certain events or situations in society or in one's personal life. Examples of events that may lead to an individual's feeling of alienation include the loss of a charismatic group leader, or the discovery that a person who served as a role model has serious shortcomings.
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    Technical definition of alienation, something our pro/antagonist suffers from.
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

Stream of consciousness (narrative mode) - 0 views

  • Stream of consciousness, the continuous flow of sense‐perceptions, thoughts, feelings, and memories in the human mind; or a literary method of representing such a blending of mental processes in fictional characters, usually in an unpunctuated or disjointed form of interior monologue. The term is often used as a synonym for interior monologue
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

Mike Battaglia's DUST - 0 views

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    A comic in the making inspired by authors, including Dostoevsky
Susan Bistrican

Dostoevsky Lecture Hall - 0 views

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    This forum isn't currently in operation as it has moved to a new location, but the old threads are useful for your research.
Susan Bistrican

Fyodor Dostoyevsky (1821 - 1881) - Find A Grave Memorial - 0 views

  • An epileptic all his life, Dostoevsky died in St. Petersburg on February 9, 1881.
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    Dostoevsky's grave at the Alexander Nevsky Monastery in Saint Petersburg, Russia.
Susan Bistrican

‪Здравствуйте! Russian Language Lesson - 0 views

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    Здравствуйте!  (ZDRAST-vui-tyeh)  A quick, easy lesson in Russian greetings.
Susan Bistrican

C&P study guide - 0 views

  • Russian word for “crime” is “prestuplenie” which in direct translation means “stepping over”. “Stepping over the line” is also one of the phrases used by Raskolnikov in his “Louse or Napoleon” theory.
Susan Bistrican

Rodion Romanovich Raskolnikov - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

  • Raskolnikov is a young ex-student of law living in extreme poverty in Saint Petersburg. He lives in a tiny garret which he rents, although due to a lack of funds has been avoiding payment for quite some time (he claims the room aggravates his depression).
  • Raskolnikov murders a pawnbroker, Alyona Ivanovna, with an axe he stole from a janitor's woodshed, with the intention of using her money for good causes, based on a theory he had developed of the "great man". Raskolnikov believed that people were divided into the "ordinary" and the "extraordinary": the ordinary are the common rabble, the extraordinary (notably Napoleon or Muhammad) must not follow the moral codes that apply to ordinary people since they are meant to be great men.
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    A decent character description of the pro/antagonist, Raskolnikov
Susan Bistrican

The Raskolnikov Project | a novel - 0 views

  • The Raskolnikov Project is an idea that has been bouncing around in my mind for a long time – a contemporary YA novel heavily influenced by Dostoevsky’s masterpiece, Crime & Punishment.
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    New installments every week! This YAL author puts her work online as a draft with little-to-no editing. Any parallels with stream-of-consciousness writing since she hastily posts her work?
Susan Bistrican

Who Framed Raskolnikov? Game Download - 0 views

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    Play for a free hour! Who framed Raskolnikov? We know he did it, but can he pin it on someone else?
Susan Bistrican

(Dostoyevsky) | Pictures, Photos and Art - 0 views

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    Photos and paintings of or inspired by Dostoevsky
Susan Bistrican

SparkNotes: Crime and Punishment: Plot Overview - 0 views

  • The following morning, Raskolnikov visits Porfiry Petrovich at the police department, supposedly in order to turn in a formal request for his pawned watch. As they converse, Raskolnikov starts to feel again that Porfiry is trying to lead him into a trap. Eventually, he breaks under the pressure and accuses Porfiry of playing psychological games with him. At the height of tension between them, Nikolai, a workman who is being held under suspicion for the murders, bursts into the room and confesses to the murders. On the way to Katerina Ivanovna’s memorial dinner for Marmeladov, Raskolnikov meets the mysterious man who called him a murderer and learns that the man actually knows very little about the case.
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    Use this as a REFERENCE ONLY for studying and writing your papers. NOTE: YOU WILL BE GIVEN INTERMITTENT READING QUIZZES, SO SPARK NOTES ALONE WILL NOT SAVE YOU FROM FAILING.
Susan Bistrican

Crime and Punishment: Quiz - 0 views

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    How many questions can you answer correctly? Test your C&P knowledge!
Susan Bistrican

SparkNotes: Crime and Punishment: Themes, Motifs & Symbols - 0 views

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    Use this as a reference when writing your papers.
Susan Bistrican

Lev Shestov - Dostoevsky and Nietzsche: The Philosophy of Tragedy - 1 - 0 views

  •  Indeed, if it is a similarity of inner experience rather than a common origin, a common place of residence, and a similarity of character that binds people together and makes them kindred, then Nietzsche and Dostoevsky can without exaggeration be called brothers, even twins.
  •   Indeed, if it is a similarity of inner experience rather than a common origin, a common place of residence, and a similarity of ch
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    More existential parallels between Dostoevsky and Nietzsche 
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