After spending a whole semester reading and thinking about Dostoevsky, the main thing that has struck me about him is his treatment of the theme of suffering. Despite, and even through, his extremely complicated characters and events, he nevertheless focuses his novels, particularly Crime and Punishment, on presenting a nuanced yet unified picture of suffering. After a brief analysis of several of the relevant characters and plot points, his thoughts on what suffering does to and for the individual will be presented, and further explained in light of his own life and the teaching of the Russian Orthodox Church. In contrast to our culture’s almost idolization of suffering as an experience which gives one instant respect, authority, and a pla...
This thesis examines the treatment of the theme of suffering by three modern authors: Feodor Dostoev...
The Existential Crisis in Pío Baroja and Fyodor Dostoevsky: The novel as the vehicle for the analysi...
Includes bibliographical references.The theme of isolation is prevalent in all of Dostoevsky's works...
After spending a whole semester reading and thinking about Dostoevsky, the main thing that has struc...
After spending a whole semester reading and thinking about Dostoevsky, the main thing that has struc...
In order to establish the views on suffering held by the nineteenth-century (1821-1881) Russian nove...
The question of catharsis was first brought up by Aristotle in his Poetics. Aristotle used to interp...
The purpose or this thesis is to describe Dostoyevsky\u27s concept of suffering to point out the fac...
Dostoevsky can be meaningfully read as a defender of Russian Orthodoxy; a psychologist; a polemicizi...
This article offers a reflection upon The Brothers Karamazov, interpreted as a theological and philo...
Fyodor Dostoevsky created works that delve into the psyche of people in harsh conditions, by creatin...
In Dostoevsky’s last novel, The Brothers Karamazov, he attempts to secure the existence of God. Whil...
At some point in the life of every person, the question arises of whether God exists, and if he does...
Dostoevsky views guilt as a qualitative determination of the person. Guilt's referent is man's perso...
Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoevsky\u27s Crime and Punishment is a work whose timeliness increases rat...
This thesis examines the treatment of the theme of suffering by three modern authors: Feodor Dostoev...
The Existential Crisis in Pío Baroja and Fyodor Dostoevsky: The novel as the vehicle for the analysi...
Includes bibliographical references.The theme of isolation is prevalent in all of Dostoevsky's works...
After spending a whole semester reading and thinking about Dostoevsky, the main thing that has struc...
After spending a whole semester reading and thinking about Dostoevsky, the main thing that has struc...
In order to establish the views on suffering held by the nineteenth-century (1821-1881) Russian nove...
The question of catharsis was first brought up by Aristotle in his Poetics. Aristotle used to interp...
The purpose or this thesis is to describe Dostoyevsky\u27s concept of suffering to point out the fac...
Dostoevsky can be meaningfully read as a defender of Russian Orthodoxy; a psychologist; a polemicizi...
This article offers a reflection upon The Brothers Karamazov, interpreted as a theological and philo...
Fyodor Dostoevsky created works that delve into the psyche of people in harsh conditions, by creatin...
In Dostoevsky’s last novel, The Brothers Karamazov, he attempts to secure the existence of God. Whil...
At some point in the life of every person, the question arises of whether God exists, and if he does...
Dostoevsky views guilt as a qualitative determination of the person. Guilt's referent is man's perso...
Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoevsky\u27s Crime and Punishment is a work whose timeliness increases rat...
This thesis examines the treatment of the theme of suffering by three modern authors: Feodor Dostoev...
The Existential Crisis in Pío Baroja and Fyodor Dostoevsky: The novel as the vehicle for the analysi...
Includes bibliographical references.The theme of isolation is prevalent in all of Dostoevsky's works...