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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

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

Crime and Punishment | FACEBOOK - 0 views

  • Crime and Punishment (Russian: Преступление и наказание Prestuplenie i nakazanie) is a novel by Russian author Fyodor Dostoevsky that was first published in the literary journal The Russian Messenger in twelve monthly installments in 1866.[1] It was later published in a single volume.
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    Find out how others reacted to C&P on a page dedicated to the book. Contribute intelligent conversation via posts and comments.
Susan Bistrican

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

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    Photos and paintings of or inspired by Dostoevsky
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 
Susan Bistrican

Raskolnikov and Alyona Ivanovna - 0 views

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    A piece from DeviantArt.com (artist unknown)
Susan Bistrican

"Raskolnikov" - 0 views

shared by Susan Bistrican on 27 Jul 11 - No Cached
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    by Amy Coyle
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    Raskolnikov after he murders pawnbroker Alyona Ivanovna and her sister, Lizaveta, with an ax.
Susan Bistrican

"Crime and Punishment" - 0 views

shared by Susan Bistrican on 27 Jul 11 - No Cached
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    "Galavin's works are powerful statements of expression and emotion, such as the picture above, an illustration from Dostoyevsky's novel _Crime and Punishment_. The lithograph shown depicts Marmeladov coming home to the squalor that his wife and children must live in because of his excesses. Accompany him is Raskolnikov who at same time is appalled but fascinated at what he sees. 'When I read Crime and Punishment and came to this scene I immediately took out pen and paper to translate my emotions into picture. As in Shakespeare words 'Has much to do with hate, but more with love' the scene shows every man's tug of war with the story we call life.' This picture, among others, was on exhibit in Europe and now exists as a Fine Art Lithograph in limited edition. This detailed lithograph is available for a price of $125.00 - the measurements are 17x22." -- http://www.angelfire.com/ga/lithograph/
Susan Bistrican

Raskolnikov by John Gagne (2007) - 0 views

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    An interesting painting by John Gagne. His interpretation of Raskolnikov is also intermingled with several portraits including his own self-portrait to create a single composite.
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