|
Fedor Dostoievsky
1821 - 1881

They were their parents Mikhail and Maria; Fyodor was the second
of seven children. The mother of Fyodor died from an illness in
1837. Fyodor and their brother Michael were taken to the Academy
of the Military Engineering of San Petersburgo soon after their
mother's death, although these plans had even begun before she
got sick.
A lot of time didn't pass until his father, a surgeon military
pensioner that was good as doctor in the Hospital of Mariinsky
for poor people in Moscow , also died in 1839. Although not
confirmed with all security, it is believed that Mikhail
Dostoevsky was murdered by his own servants that became furious
during one of the attacks of violent drunkenness of Mikhail
according to received reports, and they gave to streams the
vodka in his mouth until he drowned. Another history says that
Mikhail died from natural causes, and a neighboring farmer
manufactured this history of a rural rebellion so that he could
buy the very cheap property. Without keeping in mind what can
have happened really, Sigmund Freud was focused in this story in
their famous article, Dostoevsky and Patricide (1928).
Dostoevsky was arrested and imprisoned in 1849 to commit in
revolutionary activity against the Czar Nicholas I. November 16
that year he was sentenced to death by anti-government
activities related with a radical intellectual group, the Circle
of Petrashevsky. His readings, limited to the Bible, pushed him
to reject the socialist atheism, of western inspiration that he
had practiced in their youth. Jesus Christ teachings became the
supreme confirmation of their ethical ideas and of the
possibility of the salvation through the suffering. The
brutality that observed among the cruelest criminals, sprinkled
at the same time by expressions of generosity and for noble
feelings, they helped him to deepen in their knowledge of the
complexity of the human spirit. After an execution simulated in
the one that he faced a shooting platoon, Dostoevsky's sentence
was commuted by several years of exile carrying out works forced
in a camp of prisoners of Katorga in Omsk , Siberia . The
epilepsy incidence to that he was predisposed increased during
this period of suffering. It was liberated of the prison in
1854, and he was demanded to serve in the Siberian Regiment.
Dostoevsky passed the following five years like corporal (and
lately as lieutenant) in the Battalion of the Seventh Line of
the Regiment parked in the strength of Semipalatinsk in
Kazakhstan.
This was a point of deep change in the author's life. Dostoevsky
abandoned his earlier radical feelings and he became deeply
conservative and extremely religious. He cultivated a peculiar
friendship later with another ultra conservative, Konstantin
Pobedonostsev. A romance began with María Dmitrievna Isaeva,
with the one who later married. She was the widow of an
acquaintance in Siberia.
In 1860, he returned to San Petersburgo where it founded a
series of fruitless literary newspapers with their bigger
brother Mikhail. Dostoevsky was desolated by his wife's death in
1864, continued shortly by his brother's death. He was
financially broken by the commercial debts and the necessity of
maintaining their brother's widow and their children. Dostoevsky
collapsed in a deep depression, while he frequented rooms of
game for money and he accumulated happily thick losses in the
tables.
To escape from the creditors in San Petersburgo, Dostoevsky
traveled to Western Europe . There, he tried having again a
loving adventure with Apollinaria (Polina) Suslova, a young
university student with who had had a romance already before
several years, but she refused to their marriage proposal.
Dostoevsky was very heartbroken for this reason, but soon he met
with Anna Snitkina, a nineteen year-old stenographer with which
married in 1867. This period produced the writing of its biggest
books. Of 1873 at 1881 he claimed their previous journalistic
failures publishing a monthly newspaper full with short
histories, sketches, and articles on the current events - the
Writer's Newspaper. The newspaper was an enormous success.
In 1877 Dostoevsky he made the praise note in their friend's
funeral, the poet Nekrasov, with a lot of controversy. In 1880,
little before their death, he pronounced their famous speech
from Pushkin when removing the veil of the monument of Pushkin
in Moscow.
In their years later, Fyodor Dostoevsky lived during a lot of
time in Staraya Russa that was more near San Petersburgo and
less expensive than Germany. He died January 28 1881 and it was
buried in the Cemetery of Tikhvin in the Monastery Alejandro
Nevsky, in San Petersburgo , Russia.
Influence
Dostoevsky's influence cannot be overestimated: of Herman Hesse
to Marcel Proust, of William Faulkner to Alberto Camus, of Franz
Kafka to Gabriel García Márquez - virtually any great writer of
the century 20 have escaped their long shade (the strange voices
differing includes Vladimir Nabokov, Henry James and, more
ambiguously, to David Herbert Lawrence). Essentially myth writer
(and in this regarding times compared Herman Melville),
Dostoevsky has created a work of immense vitality and the almost
hypnotic power characterized by the following features:
feverishly dramatized scenes (the conclaves) where their
characters are frequently committed in the scandalous and
explosive atmosphere, passionately committed with the Socratic
dialogues of the Russia; the search of God, the problem of the
Wrong and the suffering of the innocent ones frequent most of
their novels; the characters fit in different categories: humble
and modest Christian (prince Myshkin, Sonya Marmeladova, Alyosha
Karamazov), nihilistic self-destructing (Svidrigailov,
Smerdyakov, Stavrogin, the underground man), cynic libertines
(Fyodor Karamazov), rebellious intellectuals (Raskolnikov, Ivan
Karamazov); their characters are also managed by the ideas
instead of the ordinary biological or social imperatives.
Dostoevsky's novels are compressed in the time (many only cover
some few days) and this allows to the author that you free of
one of the dominant features of the realistic prose, the
corrosion of human life in the process of the flow of the time -
their characters include mainly the spiritual values and these
are, by definition, eternal. Other obsessive topics include the
suicide, the wounded pride, the collapse of the family values,
the spiritual regeneration through suffering (the most important
reason), the western rejection and the statement of the Russian
Orthodoxy and the Zarismo. Their work is sometimes characterized
as 'polyphonic': contrary to other different novelists,
Dostoevsky is free of 'a single vision', and although many
writers have described the situations of several angles,
Dostoevsky has only engendered completely dramatic novels of
ideas where contradictory points of view and characters are
developed toward an intolerable crescendo.
~~~<"((((((><~~~<"((((((><~~~<"((((((><~~~<"((((((><~~~<"((((((><~~~
The Russian novelist Fyodor Dostoevsky (1821-1881) mixed social,
Gothic, and sentimental elements with psychological
irrationalism and visionary religion. The form of the novel
vastly increased in scope and flexibility as a result of his
works.
Fyodor Dostoevsky was born in Moscow in 1821, the son of a staff
doctor of a Moscow hospital. His father, a cruel man, was
murdered by his serfs in 1839, when Dostoevsky was 18 and
attending school in St. Petersburg. Sigmund Freud and other
psychoanalysts believed that throughout his life Dostoevsky felt
a secret guilt about his father's murder. Dostoevsky was trained
to be a military engineer, but he disliked school and loved
literature. When he finished school, he abandoned the career he
was trained for and devoted himself to writing. His earliest
letters show him to be a passionate, enthusiastic, and somewhat
unstable young man.
Early Works
Dostoevsky began his writing career in the tradition of the
"social tale" of the early 1840s, but he transformed the fiction
about poor people in abject circumstances into a powerful
philosophical and psychological instrument. His entry on the
literary stage was brilliant. In 1843 he finished his first
novel, Poor Folk, a social tale about an abject civil servant.
The novel was praised profusely by the reigning critic,
Vissarion Belinsky. Dostoevsky's second novel, The Double
(1846), was received less warmly; his subsequent works in the
1840s were received coldly and antagonistically by Belinsky and
others, and Dostoevsky's literary star sank quickly. The Double
has emerged, however, as his most significant early work, and in
many respects it was a work far in advance of its time.
Dostoevsky was always sensitive to critical opinion, and the
indifferent reception of The Double caused him to back off from
the exciting originality of the novel. From 1846 to 1849 his
life and work are characterized by some aimlessness and
confusion. The short stories and novels he wrote in this period
are for the most part experiments in different forms and
different subject matters. He continued to write about civil
servants in such tales as Mr. Prokharchin (1846) and The Faint
Heart (1847). The Landlady (1847) is an experiment with the
Gothic form; A Jealous Husband, an Unusual Event (1848) and Nine
Letters (1847) are burlesques; White Nights (1848) is a
sentimental romance; and the unfinished novel Netochka Nezvanova
(1847) is a mixture of Gothic, social, and sentimental elements.
Despite the variety and lack of formal and thematic continuity,
one may pick out themes and devices that reappear in the mature
work of Dostoevsky.
Dostoevsky's life showed some of the same pattern of uncertain
experimentation. Although he had already shown the religious and
conservative traits that were to become a fixed part of his
character in his mature years, he was also attracted at this
time to current revolutionary thought. In 1847 he began to
associate with a mildly subversive group called the "Petrashevsky
Circle." In 1849, however, the members were arrested and the
circle was disbanded. After 8 months of imprisonment, Dostoevsky
was sentenced to death. This sentence was actually a hoax
designed to impress the prisoners with the Czar's mercy, when he
commuted the death penalty. At one point, however, Dostoevsky
believed he had only moments to live, and he was never to forget
the sensation and feelings of that experience. He was sentenced
to 4 years of imprisonment and 4 years of forced service in the
Siberian army.
Years of Transition (1859-1864)
Dostoevsky returned to St. Petersburg in 1859 with a consumptive
wife, Maria Issaeva, a widow whom he had married in Siberia.
Their marriage was not happy; Dostoevsky and his wife reinforced
each other's unhealthy tendencies. To support himself,
Dostoevsky edited the journal Time with his brother Mikhail and
wrote a number of fictional works. His first published works
after returning from Siberia were the comic stories The Uncle's
Dream (1859) and The Village Stepanchikovo (1859). In 1861 he
published Memoirs from the House of the Dead, a fictionalized
account of his experiences in prison. That year he also
published The Insulted and the Injured, a poorly structured
novel characterized by improbable events and situations. By and
large his work during this period showed no great artistic
advance over his early work and gave no hint of the greatness
that was to issue forth in 1864 with the publication of Notes
from the Underground.
Dostoevsky's life during this period was characterized by poor
health, poverty, and complicated emotional situations. He fell
in love with the young student Polina Suslova, a girl of
complicated and difficult temperament, and carried on a
frustrating and torturous affair with her for several years. He
went abroad in 1862 and 1863 to get away from his creditors, to
repair his health, and to engage in his passion for gambling.
His impressions of Europe were unfavorable; he considered
European civilization to be dominated by rationalism and rampant
with rapacious individualism. His views on Europe are contained
in Winter Notes and Summer Impressions (1863).
Thus, at the point when his great talent was to become evident,
Dostoevsky was pursued by creditors, his wife was dying, and he
was carrying on a love affair with a young girl. His journal had
been closed down by the censors, and he was fatally pursuing his
self-destructive passion for gambling.
Notes from the Underground (1864) is a short novel, written
partly as a philosophical monologue and partly as a narrative.
In this work Dostoevsky attempts to justify the existence of
individual freedom as a necessary and inevitable attribute of
man. He argues against the view that man is a rational creature
and that society may be so organized as to assure his happiness.
He insists that man desires freedom more than happiness, but he
also perceives that unqualified freedom is a destructive force
since there is no guarantee that man will use his freedom
constructively. Indeed, the evidence of history suggests that
man seeks the destruction of others and of himself.
Crime and Punishment
Dostoevsky's first wife died in 1864, and in the following year
he married Anna Grigorievna Snitkina. She was efficient,
practical, and serene and therefore the very opposite of his
first wife and his mistress. There is very little doubt that she
was largely responsible for introducing better conditions for
his work by taking over many of the practical tasks that he
loathed and handled badly.
In 1866 Dostoevsky published Crime and Punishment, which is the
most popular of his great novels, perhaps because it appeals to
various levels of sophistication. It can be read as a serious
and complex work of art, but it can also be enjoyed as an
engrossing detective story. The novel is concerned with the
murder of an old pawnbroker by a student, Raskolnikov, while he
is committing robbery, ostensibly to help his family and his own
career. The murder occurs at the very beginning of the novel,
and the rest of the book has to do with the pursuit of
Raskolnikov by the detective Porfiry and by his own conscience.
In the end he gives himself up and decides to accept the
punishment for his act.
Raskolnikov's intentions in committing the murder share
something of the complexity and impenetrability of Hamlet's
motives. One can, however, dismiss some of the aims that
Raskolnikov consciously gives. The humanitarian motive of
murdering a useless old woman to save the careers of many useful
young men is clearly a rationalization, since Raskolnikov never
makes use of, or even appears interested in, the money he has
stolen. The "superman" theory divides mankind into extraordinary
and ordinary people, and the extraordinary people are permitted
to cross the boundaries of normal morality. This theory appears
to be a more accurate representation of Raskolnikov's thoughts.
But some critics consider this too a rationalization of
something deeper in his nature. There is some evidence that
Raskolnikov suffered from a deep sense of guilt and committed
the murder to provoke punishment and thus alleviate his guilt.
The Idiot
The Dostoevskys went abroad in 1867 and remained away from
Russia for more than 4 years. Their economic condition was very
difficult, and Dostoevsky repeatedly lost what little they had
at the gaming tables. The Idiot was written between 1867 and
1869, and Dostoevsky stated that in this work he intended to
depict "the wholly beautiful man."
The hero of the novel is Prince Myshkin, a kind of modern
Christ. He is a good man who attempts to live in a corrupt
society, and it is uncertain whether he succeeds or not, since
he leaves the pages of the novel with the world about him worse
than when he entered. Nastasya Fillipovna, one of Dostoevsky's
great female characters, shares the stage with Prince Myshkin.
When she was a young girl, her honor had been violated, and she
lives to wreak vengeance on the world for the hurt she had
suffered. While Prince Myshkin preaches forgiveness, Nastasya
Fillipovna burns with the desire to pay others back. Nastasya
Fillipovna is nevertheless attracted to Prince Myshkin, and
throughout the novel she vacillates between Myshkin, the prince
of light, and Rogozhin, an apostle of passion and destruction.
In the end Rogozhin kills Nastasya Fillipovna, and Prince
Myshkin is powerless to prevent this crime.
Some readers view The Idiot as Dostoevsky's finest creation,
while others see it as the weakest of his great novels. It is
certainly a less tidy work than Crime and Punishment, but it is
perhaps a more challenging novel.
The Possessed
Dostoevsky began The Possessed (also translated as The Devils)
in 1870 and published it in 1871-1872. The novel began as a
political pamphlet and was based on a political murder that took
place in Moscow on Nov. 21, 1869. A radical named Nechaev had a
member of his conspiratorial group murdered because the member
would not obey him unquestioningly. Nechaev escaped to
Switzerland but was arrested and returned to Russia, where he
died in prison. Nechaev's actual influence on revolutionary
movements in Russia was small, but his bravado and his
friendship with Mikhail Bakunin worked to increase his
reputation. Dostoevsky saw Nechaev as the end product of
pernicious tendencies in liberalism and radicalism.
In The Possessed Dostoevsky raises a minor contemporary event to
dimensions of great political and philosophical importance. The
novel is a satire of liberalism and radicalism; it is set in a
small provincial town and concerns the contrasting influence of
father and son. The father, Stepan Trofimovich Verkhovensky,
represents the liberalism of the 1840s, and the son, Peter
Verkhovensky, represents the radicalism of the 1860s. Dostoevsky
believed that the earlier liberalism was responsible for the
later radicalism. Nicholas Stavrogin, a mysterious and
compelling figure, stands apart from the political and
ideological struggle, but it is clear that Dostoevsky sees in
him the ultimate principle from which the disastrous
consequences stem. Stavrogin represents the totally free will,
attached to nothing and responsible for nothing. In Stavrogin,
Dostoevsky re-confronted the problem of free will.
Many readers see The Possessed not only as an accurate portrayal
of certain tendencies of the politics of the time but also as a
prophetic commentary on the future of politics in Russia and
elsewhere.
The Brothers Karamazov
During the 1870s Dostoevsky became increasingly interested in
contemporary social and political events and increasingly
concerned about liberal and radical trends among the youth.
Except for his brief flirtation with liberal movements in the
1840s, Dostoevsky was a staunch conservative. The novel A Raw
Youth (1875) grew out of his interest and concern about the
youth of Russia, and the theme of the novel may be described as
a son in search of his father. The novel is something of a
proving ground for The Brothers Karamazov but is not generally
considered to be on the same level as the four great novels.
The Brothers Karamazov (1879-1880) is the greatest of
Dostoevsky's novels and the culmination of his life-work.
Sigmund Freud ranked it with Oedipus Rex and Hamlet as one of
the greatest artistic achievments of all time. The novel is
about four sons and and their guilt in the murder of their
father, Fyodor. Each of the sons may be characterized by a
dominant trait: Dmitri by passion, Ivan by reason, Alyosha by
spirit, and Smerdyakov by everything that is ugly in human
nature. Smerdyakov kills his father, but in varying degrees the
other three brothers are guilty in thought and intention.
The greatest section of the novel is "The Legend of the Grand
Inquisitor," in which Ivan narrates a meeting between Christ and
the Grand Inquisitor, a devil surrogate. The Grand Inquisitor
presents man as slavish, cowardly, and incapable of freedom;
Christ sees him as potentially capable of true freedom. The
novel, however, does not confirm the validity of either view.
Dostoevsky sent the epilogue to the The Brothers Karamazov to
his publisher on Nov. 8, 1880, and he died soon afterward, on
Jan. 28, 1881. At his death he was at the height of his career
in Russia, and mourning was widespread. His reputation was
beginning to penetrate into Europe, and interest in him has
continued to increase.
JACANA HOME PAGE
|
CLASSIC VIDEO CLIPS
|
JACANA ASTRONOMY SITE
JACANA PHOTO LIBRARY |
OLD MAUN PHOTO GALLERY |
MAUN PHONE DIRECTORY
FREE FONTS |
PIC OF THE DAY
|
GENERAL LIBRARY |
MAP LIBRARY |
TECHNICAL LIBRARY
HOUSE PLANS LIBRARY
|
MAUN E-MAIL, WEBSITE & SKYPE LIST
|
BOTSWANA GPS CO-ORDINATES
MAUN SAFARI WEB LINKS |
FREE SOFTWARE |
JACANA WEATHER PAGE
JACANA CROSSWORD LIBRARY |
JACANA CARTOON PAGE |
DEMOTIVATIONAL POSTERS
This web page was last updated on:
09 December, 2008
              |