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Research Paper On Fyodor Dostoevsky

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Fyodor Dostoevsky was a Russian author and philosopher in the mid to late 19th century. Dostoevsky's works is has gained praise from his works such as The Idiot as well as Crime and Punishment.Authors all over the world write fiction, yet this fiction can be traced back to the writer’s own personal experiences and Fyodor Dostoevsky is no exception, as is seen clearly in his book Crime and Punishment. Born in Moscow, Russia in 1821, Fyodor Dostoevsky was one of eight children. His life in Russia accounts for his setting of Crime and Punishment being in Russia. The setting of Crime and Punishment is even set in a place where Dostoevsky frequented during his time at school. Throughout the novel the main character visits the notorious Haymarket, …show more content…

Petersburg military engineering school in 1843 and began his career as a professional writer (Peer). This occupation led to Dostoevsky’s poverty as a young adult, and ultimately influenced his perception of the world and the people in it. When Dostoevsky lost his mother, leaving him with his drunken father, he developed a hatred for drinking and the crude demeanor of men (Rollyson). Once Dostoevski began to write, he immediately gravitated toward the theme of poverty, as this was a motif he found prominent in his own life. In Crime and Punishment, the main character Raskolnikov is a young, impoverished student who is struggling to pay his debts (Dostoevsky). This depiction of the character mirrors a young Dostoevsky and it is logical for one to assume that the actions of Raskolnikov may reflect Dostoevsky’s own thoughts at this time. The novel is set in a dismal and hopeless Russia where the very core of the story revolves around a horrific crime. Dostoevsky manages to portray this action in such a way that can excuse the crime and even allow the reader to sympathize with the protagonist. This unique ability possessed by Fyodor Dostoevsky hints at his own personal contemplations with such actions (Peer). As a child Dostoevsky faced an irate father and homelife that was less than ideal, causing Dostoevsky to create and think of abnormal actions …show more content…

His ability to see and analyze their anguish following his imprisonment allowed for him to respond to the prominent social injustice. This new knowledge caused him to determine that social injustice could be used as justification for crimes, at least according to some (Rollyson). Dostoevsky’s insightful interpretation of social injustice and the appropriate reactions to such an act inspired his works which led to many books addressing such issues, yet Fyodor also shows how such justifications lead to both social and moral repercussions (Frank). In Crime and Punishment, Raskolnikov quickly finds himself in a moral dilemma based on his regret and post hoc questioning of his actions.
What was taking place in him was totally unfamiliar, new, sudden, never before experienced. Not that he understood it, but he sensed clearly, with all the power of sensation, that it was no longer possible for him to address these people in the police station, not only with heartfelt effusions, as he had just done, but in any way at all, and had they been his own brothers and sisters, and not police lieutenants, there would still have been no point in this addressing them, in whatever circumstances of life. (Dostoevsky

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