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{{Short description|Russian novelist (1821–1881)}} | |||
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{{Redirect|Dostoevsky|the surname|Dostoevsky (surname)}} | |||
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{{family name hatnote|Mikhailovich|Dostoevsky|lang=Eastern Slavic}} | |||
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{{Infobox writer | {{Infobox writer | ||
| name = Fyodor |
| name = Fyodor Dostoevsky | ||
| image = Vasily Perov - Портрет Ф.М.Достоевского - Google Art Project.jpg | | image = Vasily Perov - Портрет Ф.М.Достоевского - Google Art Project.jpg | ||
| caption |
| caption = Portrait by ], {{c.|1872}} | ||
| native_name = {{lang|ru|Фёдор Михайлович Достоевский}} | |||
| birth_name = Fyodor Mikhaylovich Dostoyevsky | |||
| birth_name = Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoevsky | |||
| birth_date = {{Birth date|df=yes|1821|11|11}} | |||
| birth_date = {{Birth date|df=y|1821|11|11}} | |||
| birth_place = Moscow, ] | |||
| birth_place = ], ] | |||
| death_date = {{Death date and age|df=yes|1881|2|9|1821|11|11}} | |||
| death_date = {{Death date and age|df=y|1881|02|09|1821|11|11}} | |||
| death_place = ], Russian Empire | |||
| death_place = ], Russian Empire | |||
| occupation = | |||
| resting_place = ], Saint Petersburg | |||
| language = | |||
| occupation = {{hlist|Writer|journalist|]}} | |||
| nationality = ] | |||
| education = ] | |||
| period = 1846–1881 | |||
| period = Modern (]) | |||
| genre = Novel, short story, journalism | |||
| movement = ], ] | |||
| subject = | |||
| years_active = 1844–1880 | |||
| movement = ] | |||
| genres = {{hlist|] (]|]|])|] (]|]|]|]|]|])|]|]|poetry|translation|]}} | |||
| notableworks = | |||
| subjects = ] | |||
{{plainlist | style=font-style: italic; | | |||
| notableworks = {{ubl|'']'' (1864)|'']'' (1866)|'']'' (1868–1869)|'']'' (1871–1872)|'']'' (1879–1880)|'']'' (1873–1881)}} | |||
* ] | |||
| spouse = {{plainlist| | |||
* ] | |||
* {{marriage|Maria Dmitriyevna Isaeva|7 February 1857|27 April 1864|end=died}} | |||
* ] | |||
* {{marriage|]|15 February 1867<!--Omission per Template:Marriage instructions-->}}}} | |||
* ] | |||
| children = 4, including ] | |||
* ] | |||
| signature = Fyodor Dostoyevsky Signature.svg | |||
}} | |||
| native_name_lang = ru | |||
| spouse = | |||
{{plainlist | | |||
* Maria Dmitriyevna Isayeva (1857–1864) | |||
* ] (1867–1881) | |||
}} | |||
| children = Sonya (1868)<br/> ] (1869–1926)<br/> Fyodor (1871–1922)<br/> Alexey (1875–1878) | |||
| influences = | |||
{{flatlist | | |||
* ] | |||
* Bible | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* Socialism (until release) | |||
* ] | |||
}} | |||
| influenced = | |||
{{flatlist | | |||
* Virtually every Russian writer: ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
}} | |||
| education = ], St. Petersburg | |||
| signature = Fyodor Dostoyevsky Signature.svg | |||
}} | }} | ||
'''Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoevsky'''{{efn|{{IPAc-en|UK|ˌ|d|ɒ|s|t|ɔɪ|ˈ|ɛ|f|s|k|i}} {{respell|DOST|oy|EF|skee}},<ref name=":0">{{cite EPD|18|Dostoievski, Dostoevsky|p=148}}</ref> {{IPAc-en|US|ˌ|d|ɒ|s|t|ə|ˈ|j|ɛ|f|s|k|i|,_|ˌ|d|ʌ|s|t|-}} {{respell|DOST|ə|YEF|skee|,_|DUST|-}};<ref name=":1">. '']''.</ref> {{lang-rus|Фёдор Михайлович Достоевский|Fyodor Mikhaylovich Dostoyevskiy|p=ˈfʲɵdər mʲɪˈxajləvʲɪdʑ dəstɐˈjefskʲɪj|a=ru-Dostoevsky.ogg|links=yes}}.}}{{efn|Dostoevsky's name has been variously transcribed into English, his first name sometimes being rendered as ''Theodore'' or ''Fedor'' and his last name as ''Dostoyevsky''.<br>Before the postrevolutionary ] which, among other things, replaced the Cyrillic letter ] with ], his name was written {{lang|ru|Ѳедоръ Михайловичъ Достоевскій}}.}} ({{OldStyleDate|11 November|1821|30 October}}{{snd}}{{OldStyleDate|9 February|1881|28 January}}),<ref name=Morson_Britannica>{{cite encyclopedia |author=Morson, Gary Saul |date=7 November 2024 |title= Fyodor Dostoyevsky |encyclopedia=] |url=http://britannica.com/biography/Fyodor-Dostoyevsky |access-date=29 November 2024 |authorlink=Gary Saul Morson}}</ref> was a Russian novelist, short story writer, essayist and journalist. Numerous literary critics regard him as one of the greatest novelists in all of ],<ref name=Morson_Britannica/> as many of his works are considered highly influential masterpieces.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Burt |first=Daniel S. |authorlink=Daniel Burt (author) |url=http://archive.org/details/literary100ranki0000burt_v6e1 |title=The Literary 100: A Ranking of the Most Influential Novelists, Playwrights, and Poets of All Time |date=2009 |publisher=New York, NY : Facts on File |others=Internet Archive |isbn=978-0-8160-6267-6 |pages=51}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last=Popova |first=Maria |authorlink=Maria Popova |date=2012-01-30 |title=The Greatest Books of All Time, as Voted by 125 Famous Authors |url=https://www.theatlantic.com/entertainment/archive/2012/01/the-greatest-books-of-all-time-as-voted-by-125-famous-authors/252209/ |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231030080041/https://www.theatlantic.com/entertainment/archive/2012/01/the-greatest-books-of-all-time-as-voted-by-125-famous-authors/252209/ |archive-date=30 October 2023 |access-date=2024-07-30 |website=The Atlantic |language=en}}</ref> Dostoevsky's literary works explore the ] in the troubled political, social, and spiritual atmospheres of ], and engage with a variety of philosophical and religious themes. His most acclaimed novels include '']'' (1866), '']'' (1869), ] (1872), '']'' (1875), and '']'' (1880). His 1864 ] '']'' is considered to be one of the first works of ] literature.<ref>{{Cite journal|url=https://www.utpjournals.press/doi/pdf/10.3138/uram.33.1-2.85|doi=10.3138/uram.33.1-2.85|title=The Philosophy and Theology of Fyodor Dostoevsky|date=2010|last1=Leigh|first1=David J.|journal=Ultimate Reality and Meaning|volume=33|issue=1–2|pages=85–103}}</ref> | |||
Born in Moscow in 1821, Dostoevsky was introduced to literature at an early age through ] and ]s, and through books by Russian and foreign authors. His mother died in 1837 when he was 15, and around the same time, he left school to enter the ]. After graduating, he worked as an engineer and briefly enjoyed a lavish lifestyle, translating books to earn extra money. In the mid-1840s he wrote his first novel, '']'', which gained him entry into ]'s literary circles. However, he was arrested in 1849 for belonging to a literary group, the ], that discussed banned books critical of ]. Dostoevsky was sentenced to death but the sentence was ]. He spent four years in a ]n prison camp, followed by six years of compulsory military service in exile. In the following years, Dostoevsky worked as a journalist, publishing and editing several magazines of his own and later '']'', a collection of his writings. He began to travel around western Europe and developed a ], which led to financial hardship. For a time, he had to beg for money, but he eventually became one of the most widely read and highly regarded Russian writers. | |||
'''Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoyevsky'''{{ref|a|}} ({{lang-rus|Фёдор Миха́йлович Достое́вский|p=ˈfʲodər mʲɪˈxajləvʲɪtɕ dəstɐˈjefskʲɪj|a=ru-Dostoevsky.ogg}}; 11 November 1821 – 9 February 1881{{ref|b|}}) sometimes transliterated '''Dostoevsky''', was a Russian writer of novels, ] and essays. Dostoyevsky's literary works explore human psychology in the troubled political, social and spiritual context of 19th-century Russia. Although Dostoyevsky began writing books in the mid-1850s, his most remembered work are from his last years, including '']'', '']'' and '']''. He wrote eleven novels, three novellas, seventeen short novels and three essays, and is often acknowledged by critics as one of the greatest and most prominent psychologists in world literature.<ref name="BritannicaRussianLit">{{cite web|url=http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/513793/Russian-literature|publisher=Encyclopædia Britannica|accessdate=11 April 2008|title=Russian literature|quote=Dostoyevsky, who is generally regarded as one of the supreme psychologists in world literature, sought to demonstrate the compatibility of Christianity with the deepest truths of the psyche.}}</ref> | |||
Dostoevsky's ] consists of thirteen novels, three novellas, seventeen short stories, and numerous other works. His writings were widely read both within and beyond his native Russia and influenced an equally great number of later writers including Russians such as ] and ], philosophers ], ], and ], and the emergence of ] and ].{{r|Morson_Britannica}} His books have been translated into more than 170 languages, and served as the inspiration for many films. | |||
Dostoyevsky was born and raised on the grounds of the Mariinsky hospital in Moscow, Russia. At an early age he was introduced to English, French, German and Russian literature, as well as to fairy tales and legends. His mother's sudden death devastated him and, around the same time, he left private school for a military academy. After his graduation he worked as an engineer and briefly enjoyed a liberal lifestyle. He soon began translating books to earn extra money. Around the mid-1840s he wrote his first novel, '']'', through which he entered into the literary mainstream. In 1849 he was arrested for his involvement with the ], a progressive discussion group. He and other members were condemned to death for their participation in this group, but the penalty proved to be a ] at the last moment, and Dostoyevsky's sentence was commuted to four years of imprisonment in Siberia. After his release, he was forced to serve as a soldier but was discharged from the military due to ill health and allowed to continue with his writing. | |||
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In the following years Dostoyevsky worked as a journalist. He published and edited several magazines of his own and later a serial, '']''. Beginning with his travels to Europe he struggled with money issues because of his ], resulting in the humiliation of begging for money. He suffered from ] throughout his adult life. But through the sheer energy and volume of his work he eventually became one of the most widely read and renowned writers in Russia. His books have been translated into more than 170 languages and have sold around 15 million copies.{{sfn|Kjetsaa|1989|p=7}} Dostoyevsky left a lasting legacy that has influenced many other writers, ranging from ] to ]. | |||
== |
== Ancestry == | ||
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| image1 = Maria Fyodorovna Dostoyevskaya.jpg | |||
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| caption1 = Maria Fyodorovna Dostoevskaya | |||
| image2 = Mikhail Andreyevich Dostoyevsky.jpg | |||
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Dostoevsky's paternal ancestors were part of a ] of ] Christians. The family traced its roots back to ], who was granted lands in the ] region (for centuries part of the ], now in modern-day ]) in 1509 for his services under a local prince, his progeny then taking the name "Dostoevsky" based on a village there called {{interlanguage link|Dostojewo|pl}} (derived from ] ''dostojnik'' – dignitary).<ref>Dominique Arban, ''Dostoïevski'', Seuil, 1995, p. 5</ref> | |||
Dostoevsky's immediate ancestors on his mother's side were merchants; the male line on his father's side were priests.{{sfnp|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=1–5}}{{sfnp|Frank|1979|pp=6–22}} | |||
In 1809, the 20-year-old Mikhail Dostoevsky enrolled in Moscow's Imperial Medical-Surgical Academy. From there he was assigned to a Moscow hospital, where he served as military doctor, and in 1818 he was appointed a senior physician. In 1819 he married Maria Nechayeva. The following year, he took up a post at the Mariinsky Hospital for the poor. In 1828, when his two sons, ] and Fyodor, were eight and seven respectively, he was promoted to collegiate assessor, a position which raised his legal status to that of the nobility and enabled him to acquire a small estate in Darovoye, a town about 150 km (100 miles) from Moscow, where the family usually spent the summers.{{sfnp|Kjetsaa|1989|p=11}} Dostoevsky's parents subsequently had six more children: Varvara (1822–1892), Andrei (1825–1897), Lyubov (born and died 1829), Vera (1829–1896), Nikolai (1831–1883) and Aleksandra (1835–1889).<ref>{{cite book|last=Terras|first=Victor|title=Handbook of Russian Literature|url={{google books|plainurl=y|id=VjKh2gkCudAC|page=102}}|date=1985|publisher=Yale University Press|page=102|isbn=978-0-300-04868-1}}</ref>{{sfnp|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=1–5}}{{sfnp|Frank|1979|pp=6–22}} | |||
=== Childhood === | |||
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] | |||
== Childhood (1821–1836) == | |||
Fyodor Dostoyevsky was born on 30 October 1821 (11 November 1821, according to the ]), the second child of Mikhail Dostoyevsky and Maria Nechayeva. The Dostoyevskys were a multi-ethnical and multi-denominational ]n noble family from the ] region with roots back to the 16th century. Branches of his family included ] and ] members, but his immediate forebears had fallen on hard times and had been reduced to the class of non-monastic clergy. Dostoyevsky's mother was descended from a family of Russian ]. Both of his parents may have had Tatar ancestry as well.{{sfn|Lavrin|1947|p=7}}{{sfn|Hingley|1978|p=17}}{{sfn|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=9–35}}{{sfn|Frank|1979|pp=6–22}} | |||
Fyodor Dostoevsky, born on {{OldStyleDate|11 November|1821|30 October}} in Moscow, was the second child of Dr. Mikhail Dostoevsky and Maria Dostoevskaya (born Nechayeva). He was raised in the family home in the grounds of the Mariinsky Hospital for the Poor, which was in a lower class district on the edges of Moscow.{{sfnp|Bloom|2004|p=9}} Dostoevsky encountered the patients, who were at the lower end of the Russian social scale, when playing in the hospital gardens.{{sfnp|Breger|2008|p=72}} | |||
Dostoevsky was introduced to literature at an early age. From the age of three, he had read heroic sagas, fairy tales and legends by his nanny, Alena Frolovna, an especially influential figure in his upbringing and his love for fictional stories.{{sfnp|Leatherbarrow|2002|p=23}} When he was four, his mother used the Bible to teach him to read and write. His parents introduced him to a wide range of literature, including Russian writers ], ] and ]; ] such as the works from writer ]; romantic works by ] and ]; heroic tales by ] and ]; and ]'s ].{{sfnp|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=6–11}}{{sfnp|Frank|1979|pp=23–54}} Dostoevsky was greatly influenced by the work of ].<ref>{{cite web| date = 1968| url = http://www.hrono.ru/organ/rossiya/natur_scol.php|title = Natural School (Натуральная школа)| publisher = Brief Literary Encyclopedia in 9 Volumes. Moscow| access-date = 1 December 2013}}</ref> Although his father's approach to education has been described as strict and harsh,{{sfnp|Mochulsky|1967|p=4}} Dostoevsky himself reported that his imagination was brought alive by nightly readings by his parents.{{sfnp|Breger|2008|p=72}} | |||
Dostoyevsky's paternal great-grandfather and grandfather practised as priests in the Ukrainian town of Bratslava, where his father was born. Mikhail was expected to join the clergy as his father had done before him, but he ran away from home instead of going into seminary, thus breaking with his family permanently. In 1809, at the age of twenty, Mikhail was admitted to Moscow's Imperial Medical-Surgical Academy. He was assigned to a Moscow hospital where he served as a military doctor and was appointed senior physician in 1818. In 1819, he married Maria Nechayeva, but resigned from military service the following year to accept a post at the Mariinsky Hospital for the poor. After the birth of two sons, ] and Fyodor, he was promoted to the post of collegiate assessor, a position that raised his legal status to nobility and enabled him to acquire a small estate, 150 ]s (about 150 km or 100 miles) from Moscow, called Darovoye. Dostoyevsky's parents had five more children after he and his elder brother were born.{{sfn|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=9–35}}{{sfn|Frank|1979|pp=6–22}} | |||
Some of his childhood experiences found their way into his writings. When a nine-year-old girl had been raped by a drunk, he was asked to fetch his father to attend to her. The incident haunted him, and the theme of the desire of a mature man for a young girl appears in ''The Devils'', ''The Brothers Karamazov'', ''Crime and Punishment'', and other writings.{{sfnp|Lantz|2004|p=61}} An incident involving a family servant, or ], in the estate in Darovoye, is described in "]": when the young Dostoevsky imagines hearing a wolf in the forest, Marey, who is working nearby, comforts him.<ref>{{cite book |last=Ruttenburg |first=Nancy |date=4 January 2010 |title=Dostoevsky's Democracy |url={{google books|plainurl=y|id=MLKbtdvf2fUC|page=76}} |publisher=] |pages=76–77}}</ref> | |||
] | |||
Dostoyevsky was raised in the family home on the grounds of the Mariinsky hospital. The family often visited their estate in Darovoye during the summers when he was a child. At the age of three he was introduced to heroic sagas, fairy tales and legends and, influenced by his nannies, he developed a deeply ingrained religious piety. His nanny Alina Frolovna and family friend, the serf and farmer Marei from Darovoye, were influential in his childhood; Marei helped him deal with his ], which began at an early age and were possibly caused by the Gothic literature that enthralled him. Dostoyevsky also discovered the hospital's garden, which was separated by a large fence from his parent's private garden. His parents forbade him to have contact with the patients in the hospital's garden in order to protect he and his siblings from them. Dostoyevsky often talked with the patients anyway, and encountered a nine-year-old girl who had been raped, which traumatised him.{{sfn|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=9–35}}{{sfn|Frank|1979|pp=23–54}} | |||
Although Dostoevsky had a delicate physical constitution, his parents described him as hot-headed, stubborn, and cheeky.{{sfnp|Kjetsaa|1989|p=6}} In 1833, Dostoevsky's father, who was profoundly religious, sent him to a French boarding school and then to the Chermak boarding school. He was described as a pale, introverted dreamer and an over-excitable romantic.{{sfnp|Kjetsaa|1989|p=39}} To pay the school fees, his father borrowed money and extended his private medical practice. Dostoevsky felt out of place among his aristocratic classmates at the Moscow school, and the experience was later reflected in some of his works, notably '']''.{{sfnp|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=14–15}}{{sfnp|Frank|1979|pp=23–54}} | |||
Dostoyevsky's parents valued education, so at the age of four his mother taught him to read and write, using the Bible. One of the day's highlights was his parents' evening readings. They introduced him to Russian literature at an early age, including ] ''Russian Tales'', the writing of ], ] and the English novelist ], as well as the works of the German ]. Dostoyevsky was impressed by Schiller's play '']'', which he saw at the age of ten. He and his brother Mikhail enjoyed Pushkin's poems, which they memorised; Pushkin's death in 1837 was a shock for the whole family. | |||
== Youth (1836–1843) == | |||
Dostoyevsky's father sent his son Fyodor first to a French boarding school and then, at the age of 13, to the best private high school in Moscow, the "College for Noble Male Children". His father had to take out loans and advances and extend his private medical practice to pay for the high school fees. Dostoyevsky felt inferior to his aristocratic classmates at the Moscow school, something that was later reflected in some of his works, especially '']''.{{sfn|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=9–35}}{{sfn|Frank|1979|pp=23–54}} | |||
On 27 February 1837, Dostoevsky's mother died of ]. The previous May, his parents had sent Dostoevsky and his brother Mikhail to Saint Petersburg to attend the free ], forcing the brothers to abandon their academic studies for military careers. Dostoevsky entered the academy in January 1838, but only with the help of family members. Mikhail was refused admission on health grounds and was sent to an academy in ] (now Tallinn, Estonia).{{sfnp|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=17–23}}{{sfnp|Frank|1979|pp=69–90}} | |||
=== Youth === | |||
] | |||
On 27 September 1837 Dostoyevsky's mother died of ]. Dostoyevsky contracted a serious throat disease soon afterwards and since then had a brittle voice. The previous May his parents sent Fyodor and his brother Mikhail to ] to attend the ], forcing the brothers to abandon their academic studies at the Moscow college for a military career.{{ref|e|}} On the way to St. Petersburg, Dostoyevsky witnessed a violent incident in a posting house; a member of the military police beat a carter and the carter subsequently took out his anger on his horse with a whip; Dostoyevsky referred to this situation in his serial '']''. Dostoyevsky entered the academy the following year, but only with the help of family members, who, unknown to him, had paid the tuition fees. He was separated from his brother, who was later sent to ], Estonia, because of his poor health and its better studying conditions.{{sfn|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=35–67}}{{sfn|Frank|1979|pp=69–90}} | |||
Dostoevsky disliked the academy, primarily because of his lack of interest in science, mathematics, and military engineering and his preference for drawing and architecture. As his friend ] once said, "There was no student in the entire institution with less of a military bearing than F.M. Dostoevsky. He moved clumsily and jerkily; his uniform hung awkwardly on him; and his ], ] and rifle all looked like some sort of fetter he had been forced to wear for a time and which lay heavily on him."{{sfnp|Lantz|2004|p=2}} Dostoevsky's character and interests made him an outsider among his 120 classmates: he showed bravery and a strong sense of justice, protected newcomers, aligned himself with teachers, criticised corruption among officers, and helped poor farmers. Although he was solitary and inhabited his own literary world, he was respected by his classmates. His reclusiveness and interest in religion earned him the nickname "Monk ]".{{sfnp|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=24–7}}{{sfnp|Frank|1979|pp=69–111}} | |||
] | |||
Signs of Dostoevsky's ] may have first appeared on learning of the death of his father on 16 June 1839,{{sfnp|Sekirin|1997|p=59}} although the reports of a ] originated from accounts written by his daughter (later expanded by ]<ref>Reik, Theodor (1940). In ''From Thirty Years with Freud'', Farrar & Rhinehart, Inc., pp. 158–76.</ref>) which are now considered to be unreliable. His father's official cause of death was an ] stroke, but a neighbour, Pavel Khotiaintsev, accused the father's serfs of murder. Had the serfs been found guilty and sent to ], Khotiaintsev would have been in a position to buy the vacated land. The serfs were acquitted in a trial in ], but Dostoevsky's brother Mikhail perpetuated the story.{{sfnp|Lantz|2004|p=109}} After his father's death, Dostoevsky continued his studies, passed his exams and obtained the rank of engineer cadet, entitling him to live away from the academy. He visited Mikhail in Reval (Tallinn) and frequently attended concerts, operas, plays and ballets. During this time, two of his friends introduced him to gambling.{{sfnp|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=31–36}}{{sfnp|Frank|1979|pp=69–111}} | |||
On 12 August 1843 Dostoevsky took a job as a lieutenant engineer and lived with Adolph Totleben in an apartment owned by Dr. Rizenkampf, a friend of Mikhail. Rizenkampf characterised him as "no less good-natured and no less courteous than his brother, but when not in a good mood he often looked at everything through dark glasses, became vexed, forgot good manners, and sometimes was carried away to the point of abusiveness and loss of self-awareness".{{sfnp|Frank|1979|pp=114–15}} Dostoevsky's first completed literary work, a translation of ]'s novel '']'', was published in June and July 1843 in the 6th and 7th volumes of the journal ''Repertoire and Pantheon'',{{sfnp|Breger|2008|p=104}}<ref>{{cite book |last=Grossman |first=Leonid |date=2011 |script-title=ru:Достоевский |language=ru |trans-title=Dostoevsky |publisher=] |page=536}}</ref> followed by several other translations. None were successful, and his financial difficulties led him to write a novel.{{sfnp|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=36–37}}{{sfnp|Frank|1979|pp=69–111}} | |||
== Career == | == Career == | ||
=== Early career (1844–1849) === | |||
] | |||
Dostoevsky completed his first novel, '']'', in May 1845. His friend ], with whom he was sharing an apartment at the time, took the manuscript to the poet ], who in turn showed it to the influential literary critic ]. Belinsky described it as Russia's first "]".{{sfnp|Sekirin|1997|p=73}} ''Poor Folk'' was released on 15 January 1846 in the ''St Petersburg Collection'' ] and became a commercial success.{{sfnp|Frank|1979|pp=113–57}}{{sfnp|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=42–49}} | |||
=== Early career === | |||
] | |||
In the autumn of 1844, Dostoyevsky shared an apartment with his friend from the academy, ]. Dostoyevsky worked on his first novel, hoping to obtain a large readership, which would improve his finances. In a letter to his brother Mikhail he wrote, "It's simply a case of my novel covering all. If I fail in this, I'll hang myself."<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.archive.org/stream/lettersoffyodorm00dostiala/lettersoffyodorm00dostiala_djvu.txt|title=Letters of Fyodor Michailovitch Dostoyevsky to his family and friends|author=Fyodor Dostoyevsky|accessdate=3 October 2012}}</ref> Dostoyevsky finished his manuscript, called '']'', in May 1845, and asked Grigorovich to read the novel aloud. Grigorovich was so impressed, he took it the same night to his friend, the poet ], who was also enthusiastic about it. The next day, Nekrasov, who called Dostoyevsky the "New Gogol", showed the manuscript to the most well-known and influential literary critic of the time, ]. Belinsky was skeptical at first, but was astonished when he read it, calling it Russia's first "social novel".{{sfn|Sekirin|1997|p=73}} '']'' was released on 15 January 1846 in the ] ''St. Petersburg Collection'' and was commercially enormously successful.{{sfn|Frank|1979|pp=113–57}}{{sfn|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=69–103}} | |||
Dostoevsky felt that his military career would endanger his now flourishing literary career, so he wrote a letter asking to resign his post. Shortly thereafter, he wrote his second novel, '']'', which appeared in the journal '']'' on 30 January 1846, before being published in February. Around the same time, Dostoevsky discovered ] through the writings of French thinkers ], ], ] and ]. Through his relationship with Belinsky he expanded his knowledge of the philosophy of socialism. He was attracted to its logic, its sense of justice and its preoccupation with the destitute and the disadvantaged. However, his Russian Orthodox faith and religious sensibilities could not accord with Belinsky's admixture of ], ] and ], leading to increasing friction between them. Dostoevsky eventually parted with him and his associates.{{sfnp|Frank|1979|pp=159–82}}{{sfnp|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=53–55}} | |||
After ''The Double'' received negative reviews (including a particularly scathing one from Belinsky) Dostoevsky's health declined and his seizures became more frequent, but he continued writing. From 1846 to 1848 he published several short stories in the magazine ''Notes of the Fatherland'', including "]", "]", "A Weak Heart", and "]". The negative reception of these stories, combined with his health problems and Belinsky's attacks, caused him distress and financial difficulty, but this was greatly alleviated when he joined the ] Beketov circle, a tightly knit community which helped him to survive. When the circle dissolved, Dostoevsky befriended ] and his brother ]. In 1846, on the recommendation of the poet ],{{sfnp|Mochulsky|1967|pp=115–21}} he joined the ], founded by ], who had proposed social reforms in Russia. ] once wrote to ] that the group was "the most innocent and harmless company" and its members were "systematic opponents of all revolutionary goals and means".{{sfnp|Kjetsaa|1989|p=59}} Dostoevsky used the circle's library on Saturdays and Sundays and occasionally participated in their discussions on freedom from censorship and the abolition of ].{{sfnp|Frank|1979|pp=239–46, 259–346}}{{sfnp|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=58–69}} Bakunin's description, however, was not true of the aristocrat ], who joined the circle in 1848 and set about creating a secret revolutionary society from amongst its members. Dostoevsky himself became a member of this society, was aware of its conspiratorial aims, and actively participated, although he harboured significant doubts about their actions and intentions.{{sfnp|Frank||2010|loc=}} | |||
In 1849, the first parts of '']'', a novel Dostoevsky had been planning since 1846, were published in ''Notes of the Fatherland'', but his banishment ended the project leaving only what was supposed to be the prologue of the novel. Dostoevsky never attempted to complete it leaving only a sketch of the novel behind.{{sfnp|Mochulsky|1967|pp=99–101}} | |||
=== Exile in Siberia === | |||
] | |||
=== Siberian exile (1849–1854) === | |||
Dostoyevsky and other members of the Petrashevsky Circle were reported to ], an official with the Ministry of International Affairs, by Antonelli, a government agent, in 1849. Dostoyevsky was accused of reading several works by Belinsky, including ''Correspondence with Gogol'', ''Criminal Letters'' and ''The Soldier's Speech'', and of passing transcriptions of these and other works. Antonelli wrote in his report, " summoned a considerable amount of enthusiastic approval from the society, in particular on the part of Belasoglo and Yastrzhembsky, especially at the point where Belinsky says that religion has no basis among the Russian people. It was proposed that this letter be distributed in several copies." Dostoyevsky responded to these charges by stating that he had only read the essays "as a literary monument, neither more nor less" and argued about "personality and human egoism" instead of politics. Dostoyevsky and several members of the circle were arrested on 22 April 1849 upon the request of Count ] and Emperor ], who feared a revolution like the ] in Russia and the ] in Europe and called the Petrashevsky Circle "conspirators".{{sfn|Mochulsky|1967|pp=121–33}}{{sfn|Frank|1987|pp=6–68}}{{sfn|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=103–69}} | |||
]]] | |||
The members of the Petrashevsky Circle were denounced to ], an official at the Ministry of Internal Affairs. Dostoevsky was accused of reading works by Belinsky, including the banned ''Letter to Gogol'',<ref name=Belinsky>Belinsky, Vissarion (1847). . ''Documents in Russian History'', Seton Hall University. Retrieved 27 December 2017.</ref> and of circulating copies of these and other works. Antonelli, the government agent who had reported the group, wrote in his statement that at least one of the papers criticised Russian politics and religion. Dostoevsky responded to these charges by declaring that he had read the essays only "as a literary monument, neither more nor less"; he spoke of "personality and human egoism" rather than of politics. Even so, he and his fellow "conspirators" were arrested on 23 April 1849 at the request of Count ] and Tsar ], who feared a revolution like the ] of 1825 in Russia and the ] in Europe. The members were held in the well-defended ], which housed the most dangerous convicts.{{sfnp|Mochulsky|1967|pp=121–33}}{{sfnp|Frank|1987|pp=6–68}}{{sfnp|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=72–79}} | |||
On 23 December 1849, Dostoyevsky and the rest of the circle were brought to Semyonov Place in St. Petersburg. A ] was staged and then cancelled by the Tsar. Dostoyevsky's sentence was commuted to four years of ] with hard labour at a ] prison camp in ], ], followed by a term of compulsory military service. The prisoners were divided into groups of three, consisting of one convict, one ] and one military policeman. After a fourteen-day drive by sleigh they reached ] in Siberia, on 11 January 1850, and eleven days later, Durov and Dostoyevsky reached Omsk.{{sfn|Frank|1987|pp=6–68}} He described the barracks in Omsk as follows: | |||
{{quote|In summer, intolerable closeness; in winter, unendurable cold. All the floors were rotten. Filth on the floors an inch thick; one could slip and fall ... We were packed like herrings in a barrel ... There was no room to turn around. From dusk to dawn it was impossible not to behave like pigs ... Fleas, lice, and black beetles by the bushel ... |Fyodor Dostoyevsky|Pisma, I: pp. 135–7.}} | |||
The case was discussed for four months by an investigative commission headed by the Tsar, with Adjutant General ], senator Prince ], Prince ], General ] and General Leonty Dubelt, head of the secret police. They sentenced the members of the circle to death by firing squad, and the prisoners were taken to Semyonov Place in Saint Petersburg on 23 December 1849. They were split into three-man groups and the first group was taken in front of the firing squad. Dostoevsky was the third in the second row; next to him stood ] and ]. The execution was stayed when a cart delivered a letter from the Tsar commuting the sentence. Dostoevsky later described the experience of what he believed to be the last moments of his life in his novel '']''. The story of a young man sentenced to death by firing squad but reprieved at the last moment is recounted by the main character, Prince Myshkin, who describes the experience from the point of view of the victim, and considers the philosophical and spiritual implications. | |||
Classified as "one of the most dangerous convicts", Dostoyevsky had his feet and hands chained which were only removed until his release. During his imprisonment, he was not allowed to read anything except his ], of which he opened random pages if he had doubts. Apart from epileptic seizures Dostoyevsky suffered from ] and was "burned by some fever, trembling and feeling too hot or too cold every night" and "losing weight".{{sfn|Sekirin|1997|p=131}} | |||
Dostoevsky served four years of exile with hard labour at a ] prison camp in ], Siberia, followed by a term of compulsory military service. After a fourteen-day sleigh ride, the prisoners reached ], a prisoner way station. Despite the circumstances, Dostoevsky consoled the other prisoners, such as the Petrashevist Ivan Yastrzhembsky, who was surprised by Dostoevsky's kindness and eventually abandoned his decision to kill himself. In Tobolsk, the members received food and clothes from the ] women, as well as several copies of the New Testament with a ten-ruble banknote inside each copy. Eleven days later, Dostoevsky reached Omsk{{sfnp|Frank|1987|pp=6–68}}{{sfnp|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=79–96}} together with just one other member of the Petrashevsky Circle, the writer Sergei Durov.{{sfnp|Sekirin|1997|p=113}} Dostoevsky described his barracks: | |||
=== Release from prison === | |||
{{blockquote|In summer, intolerable closeness; in winter, unendurable cold. All the floors were rotten. Filth on the floors an inch thick; one could slip and fall ... We were packed like herrings in a barrel ... There was no room to turn around. From dusk to dawn it was impossible not to behave like pigs ... Fleas, lice, and black beetles by the bushel ...<ref>Pisma, I: pp. 135–37.</ref>{{Missing long citation|date=November 2023}}}} | |||
] scholar ] in 1859]] | |||
Classified as "one of the most dangerous convicts", Dostoevsky had his hands and feet shackled until his release. He was only permitted to read his New Testament Bible. In addition to his seizures, he had ]s, lost weight and was "burned by some fever, trembling and feeling too hot or too cold every night". The smell of the privy pervaded the entire building, and the small bathroom had to suffice for more than 200 people. Dostoevsky was occasionally sent to the military hospital, where he read newspapers and Dickens novels. He was respected by most of the other prisoners, but despised by some Polish political prisoners because of his Russian nationalism and anti-Polish sentiments.{{sfnp|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=96–108}}<ref>In the semi-autobiographical "The House of the Dead", the attitude of Poles towards the main character, who is Dostoyevsky's alter ego, can be described as friendly. They basically treat him as their equal, partly because of what they had in common: nobility, higher education and idealistic beliefs.</ref> | |||
After his release on 14 February 1854, Dostoyevsky asked his brother Mikhail to financially help him and to send books by authors such as ], ], ], ] or ].{{sfn|Frank|1988|pp=8–20}} Dostoyevsky also began to work on '']'', basing it upon his experience in prison. It became the first novel about Russian prisons.{{sfn|Sekirin|1997|pp=107-21}} The first parts of his third book, the novel '']'', had been released in 1849, but the work had remained unfinished before he went sent to exile. In mid-March, Dostoyevsky moved to ], where he was forced to serve in the Siberian Army Corps of the Seventh Line Battalion. Around this time, Dostoyevsky met Baron ], an admirer of his who had attended the mock execution. They both rented houses outside of Semipalatinsk, in the "Cossack Garden".{{sfn|Frank|1987|pp=165–267}}{{sfn|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=171–213}} | |||
=== Release from prison and first marriage (1854–1866) === | |||
During a visit with Lieutenant-Colonel Belikhov, Dostoyevsky met the family of Alexander Ivanovich Isaev and Maria Dmitrievna Isaeva. Dostoyevsky soon fell in love with Maria. After sending a letter through Wrangel to General Eduard Totleben, apologising for his activity in several Utopian circles, Dostoyevsky obtained, in the autumn of 1856, the right to publish books and to marry. After her husband's departure to ] in August 1855 and his death the same year, Maria moved with Dostoyevsky to ]. They married in Semipalatinsk on 7 February 1857.{{sfn|Frank|1987|pp=175–221}}{{sfn|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=171–213}} In 1859 Dostoyevsky was released from military service due to his medical condition; his health had worsened since his marriage to Maria. In the same year he was granted permission to return to Russia, first to ], where he met his brother for the first time in ten years, then on to St. Petersburg, arriving on 16 September 1859. Shortly after his arrival in St. Petersburg, he joined the Society for the Aid of Needy Writers and Scholars, known as the Literary Fund. Its goal was to help scholars and writers who found had themselves in difficulty, such as those arrested on political grounds. He remained under police surveillance for the rest of his life. | |||
] | |||
] in 1858 or -59,<ref>{{cite web | url=https://fyodor-dostoevsky.com/gallery/ | title=Gallery }}</ref> portrait by ] (Соломон Лейбин)]] | |||
Dostoyevsky's only work to be completed whilst he was in prison, "A Little Hero", was issued in a journal, while "Uncle's Dream" and "The Village of Stepanchikovo" were not published until 1860. '']'' was released in ''Russky Mir'' (Russian World) on September 1860, and "The Insulted and the Injured" was released in the newly established '']'' magazine,{{ref|g|}} which was created with the help of funds from his brother's cigarette factory.{{sfn|Frank|1987|pp=290 et seq}}{{sfn|Frank|1988|pp=8–62}}{{sfn|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=171–213}} | |||
After his release on 14 February 1854, Dostoevsky asked Mikhail to help him financially and to send him books by ], ], ], ] and ].{{sfnp|Frank|1988|pp=8–20}} '']'', based on his experience in prison, was published in 1861 in the journal '']'' ("Time") – it was the first published novel about Russian prisons.{{sfnp|Sekirin|1997|pp=107–21}} Before moving in mid-March to ], where he was forced to serve in the Siberian Army Corps of the Seventh Line Battalion, Dostoevsky met geographer ] and ethnographer ]. Around November 1854, he met Baron Alexander Egorovich Wrangel, an admirer of his books, who had attended the aborted execution. They both rented houses in the Cossack Garden outside Semipalatinsk. Wrangel remarked that Dostoevsky "looked morose. His sickly, pale face was covered with freckles, and his blond hair was cut short. He was a little over average height and looked at me intensely with his sharp, grey-blue eyes. It was as if he were trying to look into my soul and discover what kind of man I was."{{sfnp|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=112–13}}{{sfnp|Frank|1987|pp=165–267}}{{sfnp|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=108–13}} | |||
Dostoyevsky travelled to Europe for the first time in 1862. He visited the German cities ], Berlin, ] and ] (where he went to gamble), followed by a trip to Belgium, and arrived in Paris in mid-June. In London he met ] and visited the ]; he travelled with Strakhov through ] in July, visited ], and then toured through cities in northern Italy, including ], ] and ]. He wrote mainly negative comments about these European countries in his ''Winter Notes on Summer Impressions''. In this book he criticised such themes as capitalism, ], ], Catholicism and Protestantism.{{sfn|Frank|1988|pp=233–49}}{{sfn|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=215–46}} | |||
In Semipalatinsk, Dostoevsky tutored several schoolchildren and came into contact with upper-class families, including that of Lieutenant-Colonel Belikhov, who used to invite him to read passages from newspapers and magazines. During a visit to Belikhov, Dostoevsky met the family of Alexander Ivanovich Isaev and Maria Dmitrievna Isaeva and fell in love with the latter. Alexander Isaev took a new post in ], where he died in August 1855. Maria and her son then moved with Dostoevsky to ]. In 1856, Dostoevsky sent a letter through Wrangel to General ], apologising for his activity in several utopian circles. As a result, he obtained the right to publish books and to marry, although he remained under police surveillance for the rest of his life. Maria married Dostoevsky in Kuznetsk on 7 February 1857, even though she had initially refused his marriage proposal, stating that they were not meant for each other and that his poor financial situation precluded marriage. Their family life was unhappy and she found it difficult to cope with his seizures. Describing their relationship, he wrote: "Because of her strange, suspicious and fantastic character, we were definitely not happy together, but we could not stop loving each other; and the more unhappy we were, the more attached to each other we became". They mostly lived apart.{{sfnp|Sekirin|1997|p=168}} In 1859 he was released from military service because of deteriorating health and was granted permission to return to European Russia, first to ], where he met his brother for the first time in ten years, and then to St Petersburg.{{sfnp|Frank|1987|pp=175–221}}{{sfnp|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=115–63}} | |||
From August to October 1863 Dostoyevsky made a second trip to Europe. In Paris he met his second love, ]. He also lost all of his money gambling, in Wiesbaden and ]. In Wiesbaden he wrote a letter to Wrangel, asking for a 100 ] loan and mentioning, for the first time, his next novel. Dostoyevsky later asked his brother Mikhail for money and, after his brother's death in July 1864, he wrote again to Wrangel requesting money. Two months before his brother's death, Dostoyevsky's wife Maria died of tuberculosis, and he became the lone parent of his stepson, Pasha, and then almost immediately afterwards, of Mikhail's family. Added to this were the fees for the financing of ''Epokha''. Without the help of his relatives and friends he would have gone bankrupt.{{sfn|Frank|1988|pp=197–211, 283–94, 248–365}}{{sfn|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=215–46}} | |||
] | |||
=== Frequent travellings === | |||
]]] | |||
The first two parts of Doestoyevsky's sixth novel, '']'', were published in January and February 1866 in the periodical '']'', bringing the magazine at least 500 new subscribers. The completed novel was also a success, prompting the critic Strakhov to remark afterwards, "Only ''Crime and Punishment'' was read during 1866". However, the novel initially received a mixed reception from critics. Most of the negative responses came from nihilists. ] of the radical magazine '']'' called the novel a "fantasy according to which the entire student body is accused without exception of attempting murder and robbery". Strakhov was generally satisfied with the novel, stating that Dostoyevsky had successfully portrayed a Russian person aptly and realistically.{{sfn|Frank|1997|pp=60–182}} | |||
The short story "A Little Hero" (Dostoevsky's only work completed in prison) appeared in a journal, but "Uncle's Dream" and "The Village of Stepanchikovo" were not published until 1860. '']'' was released in ''Russky Mir'' (Russian World) in September 1860. '']'' was published in the new ''Vremya'' magazine,{{efn|''Time'' magazine was a popular periodical with more than 4,000 subscribers before it was closed on 24 May 1863 by the Tsarist Regime after publishing an essay by ] about the ]. ''Vremya'' and its 1864 successor '']'' expressed the philosophy of the conservative and ] movement '']'', supported by Dostoevsky during his term of imprisonment and in the following years.{{sfnp|Frank|1988|pp=34–64}}}} which had been created with the help of funds from his brother's cigarette factory.{{sfnp|Frank|1987|pp=290 et seq}}{{sfnp|Frank|1988|pp=8–62}}{{sfn|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=135–37}} | |||
In summer 1866, Dostoyevsky moved to a country house in ] with his brother-in-law Alexander Ivanov to escape the heat of Moscow. He returned to St. Petersburg in late September and promised his editor, F. T. Stellovsky, that he would complete the novel '']'' by November, although he had not yet written a single line. Milyukov, one of Dostoyevsky's friends, advised him to hire a secretary. Dostoyevsky contacted Pavel Olkhin, one of the best ] in St. Petersburg, who recommended his pupil ]. Dostoyevsky was Snitkina's favourite author, as well as that of her recently deceased father. Dostoyevsky hired Snitkana in October 1866; she recorded his dictation in shorthand, and ''The Gambler'', which focused on gambling (a subject he was very familiar with), was completed in 26 days on 30 October (his birthday).{{sfn|Frank|1997|pp=60–182}}{{sfn|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=215–46}} | |||
] | |||
Dostoevsky travelled to western Europe for the first time on 7 June 1862, visiting Cologne, Berlin, Dresden, Wiesbaden, Belgium, and Paris. In London, he met ] and visited the ]. He travelled with ] through Switzerland and several North Italian cities, including Turin, Livorno, and Florence. He recorded his impressions of those trips in the essay "]", in which he also criticised capitalism, ], ], Catholicism and Protestantism.{{sfnp|Frank|1988|pp=233–49}}{{sfnp|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=143–45}} Dostoevsky viewed the Crystal Palace as a monument to soulless modern society, the myth of progress, and the worship of empty materialism.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Simpson |first=Tim |date=2023 |title=Betting on Macau: Casino Capitalism and China's Consumer Revolution |series=Globalization and Community series |location=Minneapolis MN |publisher=] |isbn=978-1-5179-0031-1 |page=276 }}</ref> | |||
On 15 February 1867, Dostoyevsky married Anna Snitkina in the ] in St. Petersburg. During the wedding celebrations he suffered a serious convulsion, caused by heavy consumption of champagne, which plunged Anna, who also suffered from bad relationships with his relatives and their neighbours, into despair. Additionally, the 7,000 rubles he earned from ''Crime and Punishment'' did not cover all their debts, so avoid a compulsory auction, Anna sold furniture, her piano and jewellery. With this money, on 14 April 1867, they began a delayed honeymoon in Germany. In Berlin they stayed in the Hotel Union, and in Dresden Dostoyevsky visited the ], where he sought inspiration for his writing. He was deeply impressed by the paintings, especially ] '']''.{{sfn|Frank|1997|pp=151–202}}{{sfn|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=247–88}} | |||
From August to October 1863, Dostoevsky made another trip to western Europe. He met his second love, ], in Paris and lost nearly all his money gambling in Wiesbaden and Baden-Baden. In 1864 his wife Maria and his brother Mikhail died, and Dostoevsky became the lone parent of his stepson Pasha and the sole supporter of his brother's family. The failure of '']'', the magazine he had founded with Mikhail after the suppression of ''Vremya'', worsened his financial situation, although the continued help of his relatives and friends averted bankruptcy.{{sfnp|Frank|1988|pp=197–211, 283–94, 248–365}}{{sfnp|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=151–75}} | |||
Three weeks later he travelled to ], where he lost all of his wife's money gambling. She and Dostoyevsky continued their trip in early July through Germany, visiting ], ], ] and ]. He gambled in casinos in Baden-Baden, despite his previous losses, so Anna was forced to go to pawnbrokers and sell her wedding presents, earrings and clothes, and even her wedding rings. In the meantime, Anna had become pregnant. On 23 August they left Baden-Baden and arrived in ] to visit a museum, in which they viewed ] '']'', a painting that would prove influential for his next novel. Dostoyevsky was so captivated by the picture that his wife had to drag him away from the panel to avoid him having an epileptic seizure.{{sfn|Frank|1997|pp=184–212}}{{sfn|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=247–88}} | |||
=== Second marriage and honeymoon (1866–1871) === | |||
In ] they were low on funds and had to pawn more of their possessions, but found lodging and good doctors, so their first child Sonya, named after his beloved niece and the heroine in ''Crime and Punishment'', was born there, on 5 March 1868. Dostoyevsky occasionally gambled in Saxon-les-Bains to raise money, but as usual he was unsuccessful. Three months later the baby died from ]; she was buried in a children's cemetery in ]. Again in financial trouble due to his addiction, he returned to Geneva to work on his next novel.{{sfn|Frank|1997|pp=223–39}}{{sfn|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=247–88}} | |||
The first two parts of '']'' were published in January and February 1866 in the periodical '']'',{{sfnp|Frank|2010|loc=}} attracting at least 500 new subscribers to the magazine.{{sfnp|Leatherbarrow|2002|p=83}} | |||
Dostoevsky returned to Saint Petersburg in mid-September and promised his editor, ], that he would complete '']'', a short novel focused on gambling addiction, by November, although he had not yet begun writing it. One of Dostoevsky's friends, ], advised him to hire a secretary. Dostoevsky contacted stenographer Pavel Olkhin from Saint Petersburg, who recommended his pupil, the twenty-year-old ]. Her shorthand helped Dostoevsky to complete ''The Gambler'' on 30 October, after 26 days' work.{{sfnp|Frank|1997|pp=42–183}}{{sfnp|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=162–96}} She remarked that Dostoevsky was of average height but always tried to carry himself erect. "He had light brown, slightly reddish hair, he used some hair conditioner, and he combed his hair in a diligent way ... his eyes, they were different: one was dark brown; in the other, the pupil was so big that you could not see its color, . The strangeness of his eyes gave Dostoyevsky some mysterious appearance. His face was pale, and it looked unhealthy."{{sfnp|Sekirin|1997|p=178}} | |||
]]] | |||
In September 1868, Dostoyevsky began working on '']'', managing to complete 100 pages in just 23 days. Sonya's death was devastating to both he and his wife, and Anna's health was affected by frequent trips to her grave. Dostoyevsky felt uncomfortable with their surroundings, so they left Geneva and moved to ], and then ], so that he could complete ''The Idiot''. While in Milan, Anna learned Italian and sometimes served as an interpreter. After enduring some rainy autumn months in Milan, they travelled southwards to ]. ''The Idiot'' was completed there in January 1869. It was serialised in ''The Russian Messenger''.{{sfn|Frank|1997|pp=241–363}}{{sfn|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=274–309}} | |||
]On 15 February 1867 Dostoevsky married Snitkina in ]. The 7,000 rubles he had earned from ''Crime and Punishment'' did not cover their debts, forcing Anna to sell her valuables. On 14 April 1867, they began a delayed honeymoon in Germany with the money gained from the sale. They stayed in Berlin and visited the ] in ], where he sought inspiration for his writing. They continued their trip through Germany, visiting ], ], ] and ]. They spent five weeks in ], where Dostoevsky had a quarrel with ] and again lost much money at the roulette table.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Moss |first=Walter G. |date=2002 |title=Russia in the Age of Alexander II, Tolstoy and Dostoevsky |publisher=Anthem Press |isbn=978-0-85728-763-2 |pages=128–33 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=PS3_6phMOS0C&pg=PA128 }}</ref> At one point, his wife was reportedly forced to pawn her underwear.<ref><!-- The Gambler Wife: A True Story of Love, Risk, and the Woman Who Saved Dostoyevsky -->{{cite Q|Q109057625}}</ref> The couple travelled on to ].<ref>{{Cite web |title=Fiodor Dostojewski – biografia, wiersze, utwory |url=https://poezja.org/wz/Dostojewski_Fiodor/ |access-date=2022-06-18 |website=poezja.org |language=pl}}</ref> | |||
In May, Anna's mother visited the family to help them. They moved to an apartment on the Piazza del Mercato Nuovo due to lack of room. Its busy location near a marketplace and the summer heat caused the Dostoyevskys a great deal of trouble, and three months later they decided to leave the city for ]. On their way to Prague, they stayed in ] and then in Vienna. Three days after their arrival in Prague they had to leave again because they could not find a furnished apartment to rent. They decided to return to Dresden, where they rented a house in the English quarter.{{sfn|Frank|1997|pp=241–363}}{{sfn|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=274–309}} | |||
In September 1867, Dostoevsky began work on '']'', and after a prolonged planning process that bore little resemblance to the published novel, he eventually managed to write the first 100 pages in only 23 days; the serialisation began in ''The Russian Messenger ''in January 1868. | |||
Shortly after their arrival, Anna's mother came to assist her daughter for the upcoming birth on 26 September of her second child ], whose name meant "love" in Russian.{{ref|f|}} In April 1871 Dostoyevsky made a final visit to a gambling hall in Wiesbaden. According to Anna, Dostoyevsky was cured of his addiction after Lyubov's birth, but whether or not this is true is open to speculation. Another reason for his abstinence might have been the closure of casinos in Germany in 1872 and 1873; it was not until the rise of ] in Germany that these were re-opened. | |||
] | |||
Their first child, Sofya, had been conceived in ], and was born in Geneva on 5 March 1868. The baby died of ] three months later, and Anna recalled how Dostoevsky "wept and sobbed like a woman in despair".{{sfnp|Kjetsaa|1989|p=219}} Sofya was buried at the ] (''Cemetery of Kings''), which is considered the Genevan ]. The grave was later dissolved but in 1986 the International Dostoevsky Society donated a commemorative plaque.<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Kathari |first1=Suzanne |title=Histoire et Guide des cimetières genevois |last2=Riliet |first2=Natalie |publisher=Éditions Slatkine |date=2009 |isbn=978-2-8321-0372-2 |location=Geneva |pages=110, 222, 227 |language=fr}}</ref> | |||
The couple moved from Geneva to ] and then to Milan before continuing to Florence. ''The Idiot'' was completed there in January 1869, the final part appearing in ''The Russian Messenger ''in February 1869.{{sfn|Frank|1997|pp=151–363}}{{sfnp|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=201–37}} Anna gave birth to their second daughter, ], on 26 September 1869 in Dresden. In April 1871, Dostoevsky made a final visit to a gambling hall in Wiesbaden. Anna claimed that he stopped gambling after the birth of their second daughter, but this is a subject of debate.{{efn|Another reason for his abstinence might have been the closure of casinos in Germany in 1872 and 1873 (it was not until the rise of Adolf Hitler that they were reopened){{sfnp|Kjetsaa|1989|p=245}} or his entering a synagogue that he confused with a gambling hall. According to biographer ], Dostoevsky took that as a sign not to gamble any more.{{sfnp|Frank|2003|p=639}}}} | |||
In July 1871, Dostoyevsky and Anna traveled by train to Berlin. During this trip, he burnt numerous manuscripts, including those for ''The Idiot'', because he was afraid of problems going through customs. The family arrived in St. Petersburg on 8 July, marking the end of a honeymoon, originally planned to last for three months, that had lasted over four years.{{sfn|Frank|1997|pp=241–363}}{{sfn|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=274–309}} | |||
After hearing news that the socialist revolutionary group "People's Vengeance" had murdered one of its own members, Ivan Ivanov, on 21 November 1869, Dostoevsky began writing '']''.{{sfnp|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=240–61}} In 1871, Dostoevsky and Anna travelled by train to Berlin. During the trip, he burnt several manuscripts, including those of ''The Idiot'', because he was concerned about potential problems with customs. The family arrived in Saint Petersburg on 8 July, marking the end of a honeymoon (originally planned for three months) that had lasted over four years.{{sfnp|Frank|1997|pp=241–363}}{{sfnp|Kjetsaa|1989|p=265}} | |||
=== Return to Russia === | |||
] | |||
Anna's younger brother Ivan Snitkin visited his sister and her husband in autumn 1869. A pupil at the Moscow Agriculture School, Snitkin told them about the unrest among the students there. One of his fellow students, Ivanov, had helped him with his travel preparations, and Dostoyevksy later discovered that this same Ivanov was murdered on 21 November by five men in a park near the university. Behind the murder was the nihilist ]. Influenced by ] ''Alliance révolutionnaire européenne'', Nechayev formed a terror organisation comprising several of these five-man groups. Subsequently, Dostoyevsky planned to write a novel about nihilism.{{sfn|Frank|1997|pp=413–33}}{{sfn|Frank|2003|pp=14–63}}{{sfn|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=310–22}} | |||
=== Back in Russia (1871–1875) === | |||
Back in Russia in July 1871, the family was again in financial trouble and had to sell their remaining possessions. Moreover, Anna was reaching the final term of pregnancy once more; Dostoyevsky thought the child would be born on 15 July and thus should be named Vladimir based on the ], but their son, who they named Fyodor (Fedya), was born one day later. Soon after the birth, they moved to a different apartment on Serpukhovskaya Street, near the Institute for Technology. The family hoped to pay off their large debts by selling their house in Peski, but problems with the tenant resulted in a relatively low selling price, and disputes with their creditors continued. Anna proposed that they raise money on her husband's copyrights and negotiated with the creditors to pay off their debts in installments.{{sfn|Frank|2003|pp=14–63}}{{sfn|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=329–31}} | |||
] | |||
Back in Russia in July 1871, the family was again in financial trouble and had to sell their remaining possessions. Their son Fyodor was born on 16 July, and they moved to an apartment near the ] soon after. They hoped to cancel their large debts by selling their rental house in Peski, but difficulties with the tenant resulted in a relatively low selling price, and disputes with their creditors continued. Anna proposed that they raise money on her husband's copyrights and negotiate with the creditors to pay off their debts in installments.{{sfnp|Frank|2003|pp=14–63}}{{sfnp|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=265–67}} | |||
Dostoyevsky was able to revive his friendships with Maykov and Strakhov and to find new acquaintances, including ] and his brother ], church politician Terty Filipov, and future Imperial High Commissioner of the Holy Synod, ], who influenced Dostoyevsky's political progression to conservatism. In early 1872, art collector ] asked Dostoyevsky to pose for ]. ], which is according to ] critic ], a depiction "half that of a Russian peasant, half that of a criminal",{{sfn|Kjetsaa|1989|p=329}} is one of the most popular images of Dostoyevsky created. | |||
Dostoevsky revived his friendships with Maykov and Strakhov and made new acquaintances, including church politician Terty Filipov and the brothers ] and ]. ], future Imperial High Commissioner of the ], influenced Dostoevsky's political progression to conservatism. Around early 1872 the family spent several months in ], a town known for its ]. Dostoevsky's work was delayed when Anna's sister Maria Svatkovskaya died on 1 May 1872, from either ] or ],<ref>{{cite encyclopedia |url=http://www.niknas.narod.ru/4dost/1dost_enz/dost_enz3-10.htm |script-title=ru:Вокруг Достоевского |language=ru |trans-title=Around Dostoyevsky |last=Nasedkin |first=Nikolay |encyclopedia=The Dostoyevsky Encyclopedia |access-date=5 November 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130502232436/http://www.niknas.narod.ru/4dost/1dost_enz/dost_enz3-10.htm |archive-date=2 May 2013 |url-status=dead }}</ref> and Anna developed an abscess on her throat.{{sfnp|Frank|2003|pp=14–63}}{{sfnp|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=268–71}} | |||
Around this time, the Dostoyevskys planned a vacation in ], a ] known for its pleasant salt baths. On the journey, they took the train to ] and then to ]. However, Lyuba had received a wrist injury a few weeks before their departure. A doctor told them she had a ], but it ultimately turned out to be a fracture, and Anna returned to St. Petersburg with her while Dostoyevsky waited with their son in Staraya Russa for their return. Shortly afterwards, Anna's sister died from ] and Anna developed an abscess on her throat. Dostoyevsky's work on his next novel was delayed due to these issues.{{sfn|Frank|2003|pp=14–63}}{{sfn|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=329–31}} | |||
The family returned to St Petersburg in September. ''Demons'' was finished on 26 November and released in January 1873 by the "Dostoevsky Publishing Company", which was founded by Dostoevsky and his wife. Although they accepted only cash payments and the bookshop was in their own apartment, the business was successful, and they sold around 3,000 copies of ''Demons''. Anna managed the finances. Dostoevsky proposed that they establish a new periodical, which would be called ''A Writer's Diary'' and would include a collection of essays, but funds were lacking, and the ''Diary'' was published in ]'s ''The Citizen'', beginning on 1 January, in return for a salary of 3,000 rubles per year. In the summer of 1873, Anna returned to Staraya Russa with the children, while Dostoevsky stayed in St Petersburg to continue with his ''Diary''.{{sfnp|Frank|2003|pp=38–118}}{{sfnp|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=269–89}} | |||
] | |||
The family returned to St. Petersburg in September 1872.{{sfn|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=310–22}} ''The Demons'' (also known as ''The Possessed'') was finished on 26 November 1872 and released in January by the "Dostoyevsky Press", founded by Dostoyevsky and his wife. Although the books were available on a cash-only basis and their apartment served as a bookshop, the business was successful and about 3,000 copies of ''The Demons'' were sold. Anna was responsible for the financing. Dostoyevsky proposed that they establish a new periodical, '']'', including a collection of essays of the same name, but due to lack of money it was published instead in Meshchersky's ''The Citizen'', beginning on 1 January in return for a salary of 3,000 rubles per year. In the summer of 1873, Anna again travelled with her children to Staraya Russa, while Dostoyevsky stayed in St. Petersburg to continue with his ''Diary''.{{sfn|Frank|2003|pp=38–118}}{{sfn|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=335–6}} | |||
In March 1874, |
In March 1874, Dostoevsky left ''The Citizen'' because of the stressful work and interference from the Russian bureaucracy. In his fifteen months with ''The Citizen'', he had been taken to court twice: on 11 June 1873 for citing the words of Prince Meshchersky without permission, and again on 23 March 1874. Dostoevsky offered to sell a new novel he had not yet begun to write to ''The Russian Messenger'', but the magazine refused. Nikolay Nekrasov suggested that he publish ''A Writer's Diary'' in ''Notes of the Fatherland''; he would receive 250 rubles for each printer's sheet – 100 more than the text's publication in ''The Russian Messenger'' would have earned. Dostoevsky accepted. As his health began to decline, he consulted several doctors in St Petersburg and was advised to take a cure outside Russia. Around July, he reached Ems and consulted a physician, who diagnosed him with acute ]. During his stay he began ''The Adolescent''. He returned to Saint Petersburg in late July.{{sfnp|Frank|2003|pp=120–47}}{{sfnp|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=273–95}} | ||
Anna proposed that they spend the winter in Staraya Russa to allow Dostoevsky to rest, although doctors had suggested a second visit to Ems because his health had previously improved there. On 10 August 1875 his son Alexey was born in Staraya Russa, and in mid-September the family returned to Saint Petersburg. Dostoevsky finished ''The Adolescent'' at the end of 1875, although passages of it had been serialised in ''Notes of the Fatherland'' since January. ''The Adolescent'' chronicles the life of Arkady Dolgoruky, the illegitimate child of the landowner Versilov and a peasant mother. It deals primarily with the relationship between father and son, which became a frequent theme in Dostoevsky's subsequent works.{{sfnp|Frank|2003|pp=149–97}}{{sfnp|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=273–302}} | |||
Dostoyevsky's health began to decline, and he suffered from the first symptoms of a lung disease. He consulted several doctors in St. Petersburg and was advised to take a cure outside of Russia. One doctor recommended ], another ]. Dostoeyvsky left Russia and in June visited a well-known pulmonologist in Berlin, who referred him to a doctor in Bad Ems. Around July, Dostoyevsky reached Ems but went to a different physician, where he was diagnosed with acute ] and prescribed a natural mineral water. During his stay at the health spa he began to work on '']'', also known as ''The Raw Youth''. In late July he returned to St. Petersburg.{{sfn|Frank|2003|pp=120–47}}{{sfn|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=337–61}} | |||
=== Last years (1876–1881) === | |||
His wife proposed that they spend the winter in Staraya Russa to give him a rest from his work, although doctors suggested that Dostoyevsky make a second visit to Ems because his health improved since his last visit. On 10 August the following year, in Staraya Russa, his son Alexey was born. In mid-September the family returned to St. Petersburg. Dostoyevsky finished ''The Adolescent'' at the end of 1875, although sections had been serialised since January of that year in the ''Annals''. ''The Adolescent'' chronicles the life of a 19-year-old intellectual, Arkady Dolgoruky, who is the illegitimate child of a controversial and womanising landowner named Versilov. A focus of the novel is the recurring conflict between father and son, particularly in ideology, representing battles between the conventional "old" way of thinking in the 1840s and the new nihilistic view of the youth of 1860s Russia.{{sfn|Frank|2003|pp=149–97}}{{sfn|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=337–61}} | |||
] | |||
In early 1876, Dostoevsky continued work on his ''Diary''. The book includes numerous essays and a few short stories about society, religion, politics and ethics. The collection sold more than twice as many copies as his previous books. Dostoevsky received more letters from readers than ever before, and people of all ages and occupations visited him. With assistance from Anna's brother, the family bought a ] in Staraya Russa. In the summer of 1876, Dostoevsky began experiencing shortness of breath again. He visited Ems for the third time and was told that he might live for another 15 years if he moved to a healthier climate. When he returned to Russia, Tsar ] ordered Dostoevsky to visit his palace to present the ''Diary'' to him, and he asked him to educate his sons, Sergey and Paul. This visit further increased Dosteyevsky's circle of acquaintances. He was a frequent guest in several salons in Saint Petersburg and met many famous people, including Countess ], ], ], ], ] and ].{{sfnp|Frank|2003|pp=199–280}}{{sfnp|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=303–06}} | |||
Dostoevsky's health declined further, and in March 1877 he had four epileptic seizures. Rather than returning to Ems, he visited Maly Prikol, a manor near ]. While returning to St Petersburg to finalise his ''Diary'', he visited Darovoye, where he had spent much of his childhood. In December he attended Nekrasov's funeral and gave a speech. He was appointed an honorary member of the ], from which he received an honorary certificate in February 1879. He declined an invitation to an international congress on copyright in Paris after his son Alyosha had a severe epileptic seizure and died on 16 May. The family later moved to the apartment where Dostoevsky had written his first works. Around this time, he was elected to the board of directors of the Slavic Benevolent Society in Saint Petersburg. That summer, he was elected to the honorary committee of the ], whose members included ], ], ], ], ], ], ] and ]. Dostoevsky made his fourth and final visit to Ems in early August 1879. He was diagnosed with early-stage ], which his doctor believed could be successfully managed, but not cured.{{sfnp|Frank|2003|pp=320–75}}{{sfnp|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=307–49}} | |||
=== Last years === | |||
] monument in Moscow]] | |||
<!--]--> | |||
In early 1876 Dostoyevsky continued to work on his ''Diaries''. The book's main theme was, like ''The Adolescent'', child abuse by adults. This essay collection sold over twice as much as his previous books. Dostoyevsky received more letters from readers than before, and people of all ages and occupations visited him. Thanks to Anna's brother, the family finally bought a ] in Staraya Russa.{{sfn|Frank|2003|pp=199–280}}{{sfn|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=337–93}} | |||
] | |||
In the summer of 1876, Dostoyevsky again began suffering from breathlessness. He visited Ems for a third time, was prescribed a similar remedy as before and was told that he might live for another 15 years if he move to a more healthy climate. When Dostoyevsky returned to Russia, Tsar ] ordered him to visit his palace and to present ''Diaries'' to him, and asked that Dostoyevsky educate his sons, Sergey and Paul. This visit led to the increase of his circle of acquaintances. He was a frequent guest in several salons in St. Petersburg and met with many famous people, including Princess Sofya Tolstaya, the poet ], the politician ], the journalist ], the musician ] and artist ].{{sfn|Frank|2003|pp=199–280}}{{sfn|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=337–93}} | |||
On 3 February 1880 Dostoevsky was elected vice-president of the Slavic Benevolent Society, and he was invited to speak at the unveiling of the Pushkin memorial in Moscow. On 8 June he delivered ], giving an impressive performance that had a significant emotional impact on his audience. His speech was met with thunderous applause, and even his long-time rival Turgenev embraced him. ] praised the speech in his essay "The Pushkin Anniversary and Dostoevsky's Speech" in '']'', writing that "the language of Dostoevsky's really looks like a sermon. He speaks with the tone of a prophet. He makes a sermon like a pastor; it is very deep, sincere, and we understand that he wants to impress the emotions of his listeners."{{sfnp|Sekirin|1997|p=255}} The speech was criticised later by liberal political scientist Alexander Gradovsky, who thought that Dostoevsky idolised "the people",{{sfnp|Lantz|2004|p=170}} and by conservative thinker ], who, in his essay "On Universal Love", compared the speech to French utopian socialism.{{sfnp|Lantz|2004|pp=230–31}} The attacks led to a further deterioration in his health.{{sfnp|Frank|2003|pp=475–531}}{{sfnp|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=353–63}} | |||
Dostoyevsky's health began to deteriorate further, and in March 1877 he had four epileptic seizures. Instead of going back to Ems he decided to visit ], a manor near ]. On the way back to St. Petersburg to finalise his ''Diaries'', Dostoyevsky visited Darovoye, where he spent much of his childhood. At the same time Anna and her children made a ] to ]. In December he attended ]'s funeral and gave a speech. He was also appointed an honorary member of the ].{{sfn|Frank|2003|pp=320–75}}{{sfn|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=337–93}} | |||
==Death== | |||
In early 1878 he heard a speech about the "Man of God" delivered by Vladimir Solovyov, which set him thinking about his next novel. In February 1879 he received an honorary certificate from the academy and in the spring he was invited to participate in an international congress about copyright in Paris, headed by ]. He declined the invitation after his son Alyosha's death on 16 May, who suffered from an epileptic seizure that had lasted for two hours. The family later moved to an apartment on Yamskaya Street, where Dostoyevsky had written his first works. Around this time he was elected to the board of directors of the Slavic Benevolent Society in St. Petersburg, and that summer he was elected to the honorary committee of the ], which included Victor Hugo, Ivan Turgenev, ], ], ], ], ] and Leo Tolstoy.{{sfn|Frank|2003|pp=361–407}}{{sfn|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=337–93}} | |||
], drawing by ], 1881]] | |||
] | |||
On {{OldStyleDate|6 February|1881|25 January}}, while searching for members of the terrorist organisation ] ("The People's Will") who would soon assassinate Tsar Alexander II, the Tsar's secret police executed a search warrant in the apartment of one of Dostoevsky's neighbours.{{citation needed|date=April 2014}} On the following day, Dostoevsky suffered a ]. Anna denied that the search had caused it, saying that the haemorrhage had occurred after her husband had been looking for a dropped pen holder.{{efn|The haemorrhage could also have been triggered by heated disputes with his sister Vera about his aunt Aleksandra Kumanina's estate, which was settled on 30 March and discussed in the St Petersburg City Court on 24 July 1879.{{sfnp|Sekirin|1997|pp=309–16}}{{sfnp|Lantz|2004|p=xxxiii}} Anna later acquired a part of his estate consisting of around 185 ] (around 500 acres or 202 ]) of forest and 92 desiatina of farmland.{{sfnp|Lantz|2004|p=223}}}} After another haemorrhage, Anna called the doctors, who gave a poor prognosis. A third haemorrhage followed shortly afterwards.{{sfnp|Frank|2003|pp=707–50}}{{sfnp|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=368–71}} While seeing his children before dying, Dostoevsky requested that the ] be read to his children. The profound meaning of this request is pointed out by ]: | |||
] | |||
<blockquote>It was this parable of transgression, repentance, and forgiveness that he wished to leave as a last heritage to his children, and it may well be seen as his own ultimate understanding of the meaning of his life and the message of his work.{{sfnp|Frank|2010|p=925}}</blockquote> | |||
Dostoyevsky made his fourth and final visit to Ems in early August 1879. He was diagnosed as having early-stage ]. His doctor believed that although his disease could not be cured, it could be successfully managed. The first parts of Dostoyevsky's final novel, ''The Brothers Karamazov'', were serialised in ''The Russian Messenger'' on 1 February and the final sections were published in November 1880.{{sfn|Frank|2003|pp=462–73}}{{sfn|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=337–414}} | |||
Among Dostoevsky's last words was his quotation of {{Sourcetext|source=Bible|version=King James|book=Matthew|chapter=3|verse=14|range=–15}}: "But John forbad him, saying, I have a need to be baptised of thee, and comest thou to me? And Jesus answering said unto him, Suffer it to be so now: for thus it becometh us to fulfil all righteousness", and he finished with "Hear now—permit it. Do not restrain me!".{{sfnp|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=371–72}} His last words to his wife Anna were: "Remember, Anya, I have always loved you passionately and have never been unfaithful to you ever, even in my thoughts!"<ref>{{cite web |last1=Mikhailova |first1=Valeriya |title=To be the wife of Fyodor Dostoevsky (part 4) |url=https://bloggerskaramazov.com/2017/03/06/anna-grigorievna-4/ |website=Bloggers Karamazov |date=March 6, 2017}}</ref> When he died, his body was placed on a table, following Russian custom. He was interred in the ] at the ],<ref>{{cite web |url=http://eng.md.spb.ru/dostoevsky/Dostoevsky_Petersburg/?more |title=Dostoevsky in Petersburg |publisher=] |access-date=5 November 2017 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160325192707/http://eng.md.spb.ru/dostoevsky/Dostoevsky_Petersburg/?more |archive-date=25 March 2016 }}</ref> near his favourite poets, ] and ]. It is unclear how many attended his funeral. According to one reporter, more than 100,000 mourners were present, while others describe attendance between 40,000 and 50,000. His tombstone is inscribed with lines from the New Testament:{{sfnp|Frank|2003|pp=707–50}}{{sfnp|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=373 et seqq}} | |||
] | |||
At nearly 800 pages, ''The Brothers Karamazov'' is Dostoyevsky's largest literary work and his largest contribution to literature; it is often cited as his greatest work, his '']''. It had both critical and popular acclaim.{{sfn|Frank|2003|pp=390–441}} On 3 February 1880, Dostoyevsky was chosen as the vice president of the Slavic Benevolent Society, and was invited to speak at the unveiling of the Pushkin memorial in Moscow. Initially scheduled for 26 May, the date of the unveiling was rescheduled to 6 June because of the death of ]. Dostoyevsky delivered his speech from memory two days later, inside a large room, giving such an impressive performance that had great emotional impact on many in his audience. His speech was met with thunderous applause, and even his long-time rival ] embraced him. Dostoyevsky's speech was later attacked by several people. For example, the liberal political scientist Alexander Gradovsky thought that he idolized the people in his speech,{{sfn|Lantz|2004|p=170}} and conservative thinker ], in his essay "On Universal Love", compared the speech with French Utopian socialism rather than Christianity. However, Leontiev praised Dostoyevsky's last novel, stating that it features no "rosy Christianity".{{sfn|Lantz|2004|pp=230–31}} These attacks led to a further deterioration of Dostoyevsky's health.{{sfn|Frank|2003|pp=475–531}}{{sfn|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=337–414; 427–43}} | |||
{{blockquote|Verily, verily, I say unto you, Except a corn of wheat fall into the ground and die, it abideth alone: but if it dies, it bringeth forth much fruit.|source={{Sourcetext|source=Bible|version=King James|book=John|chapter=12|verse=24}}}} | |||
On 25 January, the Tsar's secret police, searching for members of the terror organisation ] ("The People's Will") who had assassinated Tsar Alexander II, executed a search warrant in the apartment of one of Dostoyevsky's neighbours. Anna denied that this might have been responsible for Dostoyevksy's ] on 26 January 1881, stating that it occurred after Dostoyevsky's search for a dropped pen holder. Following another haemorrhage Anna called for doctors, who gave a grim prognosis. A third haemorrhage followed shortly afterwards. | |||
== Personal life == | |||
Among Dostoyevsky's last words was his citation of ]: "But John tried to stop him, saying, 'I need to be baptised by you, and are you coming to me?'"<ref>Robert L. Belknap: ''The Genesis of The Brothers Karamazov: The Aesthetics, Ideology, and Psychology of Text Making'', Northwestern University Press, 1990, p. 20, isbn 9780810108455</ref> | |||
=== Previous Relationships === | |||
Before meeting and marrying his future wife in 1867, Dostoevsky had other relationships. Dostoevsky had his first known affair with ], whom he met in ]'s circle in the early 1840s. He described her as educated, interested in literature, and a ].{{sfnp|Kjetsaa|1989|p=50}} He admitted later that he was uncertain about their relationship.<ref>Payne, Robert. ''Dostoyevsky: A Human Portrait'', Knopf, 1961, p. 51, {{OCLC|609509729}}</ref> According to Anna Dostoevskaya's memoirs, Dostoevsky once asked his sister's sister-in-law, Yelena Ivanova, whether she would marry him, hoping to replace her mortally ill husband after he died, but she rejected his proposal.{{sfnp|Sekirin|1997|p=299}} | |||
Dostoevsky and ] had a short but intimate affair, which peaked in the winter of 1862–1863. Suslova's dalliance with a Spaniard in late spring and Dostoevsky's gambling addiction and age ended their relationship. He later described her in a letter to ] as a "great egoist. Her egoism and her vanity are colossal. She demands ''everything'' of other people, all the perfections, and does not pardon the slightest imperfection in the light of other qualities that one may possess", and later stated "I still love her, but I do not want to love her any more. She doesn't deserve this love ..."{{sfnp|Sekirin|1997|p=168}} In 1858 Dostoevsky had a romance with comic actress Aleksandra Ivanovna Schubert. Although she divorced Dostoevsky's friend ], she would not live with him. Dostoevsky did not love her either, but they were probably good friends. She wrote that he "became very attracted to me".{{sfnp|Frank|1988|pp=18–19}}{{sfnp|Mochulsky|1967|pp=183–84}} | |||
According to a Russian custom, his body was placed on a table. Dostoyevsky was interred in the ] at the ], near his favourite poets ] and ]. It is not exactly known how many visitors attended his funeral. According to a reporter, more than 100,000 mourners were there, while others state a number between 40,000 and 50,000. His burial attracted many prominent people. Nestor, archbishop of Vyborg, delivered the ], while Ioann Yanyshev performed the ]. His tombstone is inscribed with these words of Christ from the New Testament:{{sfn|Frank|2003|pp=707–50}}{{sfn|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=444–51}} | |||
Through a worker in ''Epoch'', Dostoevsky learned of the Russian-born Martha Brown (née Elizaveta Andreyevna Chlebnikova), who had had affairs with several westerners. Her relationship with Dostoevsky is known only through letters written between November 1864 and January 1865.{{sfnp|Frank|2010|loc=}}{{sfnp|Lantz|2004|pp=45–46}} In 1865, Dostoevsky met ]. Their relationship is not verified; Anna Dostoevskaya spoke of a good affair, but Korvin-Krukovskaya's sister, the mathematician ], thought that Korvin-Krukovskaya had rejected him.{{sfnp|Sekirin|1997|p=169}} | |||
{{quote|Verily, verily, I say unto you, Except a corn of wheat fall into the ground and die, it abideth alone: but if it die, it bringeth forth much fruit.| Jesus|from ] 12:24}} | |||
=== Political beliefs === | |||
==Personal life== | |||
In his youth, Dostoevsky enjoyed reading ]'s ''History of the Russian State'' (published 1818–1829), which praised conservatism and Russian independence, ideas that Dostoevsky would embrace later in life. Before his arrest for participating in the Petrashevsky Circle in 1849, Dostoevsky remarked, "As far as I am concerned, nothing was ever more ridiculous than the idea of a ] government in Russia." In an 1881 edition of his ''Diaries'', Dostoevsky <!-- "favoured republicanism" Contradictory? --> stated that the Tsar and the people should form a unity: "For the people, the tsar is not an external power, not the power of some conqueror ... but a power of all the people, an all-unifying power the people themselves desired."{{sfnp|Lantz|2004|pp=183–89}} | |||
While critical of serfdom, Dostoevsky was skeptical about the creation of a ], a concept he viewed as unrelated to Russia's history. He described it as a mere "gentleman's rule" and believed that "a constitution would simply enslave the people".{{citation needed|date=September 2024}} He advocated social change instead, for example removal of the feudal system and a weakening of the divisions between the peasantry and the affluent classes. His ideal was a ]n, Christianized Russia where "if everyone were actively Christian, not a single social question would come up ... If they were Christians they would settle everything".{{sfnp|Lantz|2004|pp=323–27}} He thought democracy and ] were poor systems; of France he wrote, "the oligarchs are only concerned with the interest of the wealthy; the democrats, only with the interest of the poor; but the interests of society, the interest of all and the future of France as a whole—no one there bothers about these things."{{sfnp|Lantz|2004|pp=323–27}} He maintained that ] ultimately led to social discord. In the 1860s, he discovered '']'', a movement similar to ] in that it ] and contemporary philosophical movements, such as ] and materialism. ''Pochvennichestvo'' differed from Slavophilism in aiming to establish, not an isolated Russia, but a more open state modelled on the Russia of ].{{sfnp|Lantz|2004|pp=323–27}} | |||
===Affairs=== | |||
Dostoyevsky's had his first known affair with Avdotya Yakovlevna, the wife of Panayev. He met her in the Panayev circle, which included Belinsky and Turgenyev as members, in the early 1840s. She was described as educated, interested in literature and a ].{{sfn|Kjetsaa|1989|p=50}} However, Dostoyevsky later admitted that he "fell hopelessly in love with Panayeva, I'm over it now, but I'm not sure".<ref>Robert Payne: ''Dostoyevsky: | |||
a human portrait'', Knopf, 1961, p. 51</ref> According to Dostoyevskaya in her memoirs, Dostoyevsky once asked his sister's sister-in-law Yelena Ivanova whether she would marry him (as her husband was deathly ill), but she denied his proposal.{{sfn|Sekirin|1997|p=299}} | |||
In his incomplete article "Socialism and Christianity", Dostoevsky claimed that civilisation ("the second stage in human history") had become degraded, and that it was moving towards liberalism and losing its faith in God. He asserted that the traditional concept of Christianity should be recovered. He thought that contemporary western Europe had "rejected the single formula for their salvation that came from God and was proclaimed through revelation, 'Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself', and replaced it with practical conclusions such as, {{'}}''Chacun pour soi et Dieu pour tous''{{'}} , or "scientific" slogans like '].{{'"}}{{sfnp|Lantz|2004|pp= 183–89}} He considered this crisis to be the consequence of the collision between communal and individual interests, brought about by a decline in religious and moral principles. | |||
Another short but intimate affair was with Polina Suslova, which peaked in the winter of 1862–63 and decreased in the following years. Suslova's infidelity with a Spaniard in late spring and Dostoyevsky's gambling addiction and age resulted in the end of their relationship. He later described her in a letter to Nadezhda Suslova as a "great egoist. Her egoism and her vanity are colossal. She demands ''everything'' of other people, all the perfections, and does not pardon the slightest imperfection in the light of other qualities that one may possess", and later stated "I still love her, but I do not want to love her any more. She doesn't deserve this love..."{{sfn|Sekirin|1997|p=168}} Around this time, his first wife, Maria Dostoyevskaya, née Isaeva, died of tuberculosis. She had previously refused his marriage proposal, stating that they were not meant for each other and that his poor financial situation precluded marriage. When Dostoyevsky later went to Kuznetsk, he discovered that she had had an affair with the 24-year-old schoolmaster Nikolay Vergunov. Despite this, Maria married Dostoyevsky in Semipalatinsk on 7 February 1857. Their family life was unhappy, however, and she found it difficult to cope with his seizures. Describing their relationship, he wrote "Because of her strange, suspicious and fantastic character, we were definitely not happy together, but we could not stop loving each other; and the more unhappy we were, the more attached to each other we became." They mostly lived apart.{{sfn|Sekirin|1997|p=168}}{{sfn|Frank|1987|pp=175–221}}{{sfn|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=171–213}} | |||
Dostoevsky distinguished three "enormous world ideas" prevalent in his time: ], ] and ]y. He claimed that Catholicism had continued the tradition of ] and had thus become anti-Christian and proto-socialist,<ref> | |||
In the spring of 1865, Dostoyevsky met ], a Russian socialist and daughter of General Vasily Korvin-Krukovsky. Their relationship was not certain; while Anna Dostoyevskaya spoke of a good affair, Anna Korvin-Krukovskaya's sister, the mathematician ], thought that Anna rejected him after a visit.{{sfn|Sekirin|1997|p=169}} Around 1866, Dostoyevsky fell in love with the stenographer ], a "very young and rather nice looking twenty-year-old woman with a kind heart... I noticed that my stenographer loved me sincerely, though she never told me about it. I also liked her more and more". He later "proposed to her and... got married".{{sfn|Sekirin|1997|p=169}} | |||
{{cite book | |||
|last1 = Blake | |||
|first1 = Elizabeth Ann | |||
|date = 30 April 2014 | |||
|chapter = Dostoevsky's Portrayal of Transnational Catholicism in ''Demons'' | |||
|title = Dostoevsky and the Catholic Underground | |||
|url = https://books.google.com/books?id=aQA3AwAAQBAJ | |||
|series = Studies in Russian Literature and Theory | |||
|publication-place = Evanston, Illinois | |||
|publisher = Northwestern University Press | |||
|page = 122 | |||
|isbn = 9780810167568 | |||
|access-date = 17 September 2024 | |||
|quote = Dostoevsky underscores a link between Catholicism and socialism while asserting his belief in the coercive nature of their statecraft . | |||
}} | |||
</ref> | |||
inasmuch as the Church's interest in political and mundane affairs led it to abandon the idea of Christ. For Dostoevsky, ] was "the latest incarnation of the Catholic idea" and its "natural ally".{{sfnp|Lantz|2004|p=185}} He found Protestantism self-contradictory and claimed that it would ultimately lose power and spirituality. He deemed (Russian) Orthodoxy to be the ideal form of Christianity. | |||
For all that, to place Dostoevsky politically is not simple: as a Christian, he rejected atheistic socialism; as a traditionalist, he rejected the destruction of the institutions; and, as a pacifist, he rejected any violent method or upheaval led by either progressives or reactionaries. He supported private property and business rights, and did not agree with many criticisms of the free market from the socialist utopians of his time.<ref>{{cite book | last1=Dostoevsky | first1=Fyodor | title=A Writer's Diary | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=38xQHS4h0yEC | date=20 July 1997 | publisher=Northwestern University Press | isbn=9780810115163 | access-date=3 July 2019}}</ref>{{request quotation|date=September 2024}}<ref>{{cite book | last1=Ward | first1=Bruce K. | date=30 October 2010 | title=Dostoyevsky's Critique of the West: The Quest for the Earthly Paradise | publisher=] | isbn=9781554588169 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Bt3fAgAAQBAJ&q=property&pg=PT23 | access-date=3 July 2019 }}</ref>{{Page needed|date=November 2023}} | |||
=== Personality and physical appearance === | |||
At 2 ]s and 6 ]s (approximately 1.60 m or 5'2"),{{sfn|Sekirin|1997|p=108}} Dostoyevsky had a powerful personality but a less robust physical constitution. He was described by his parents as a hot-headed youngster, stubborn and cheeky.{{sfn|Kjetsaa|1989|p=16}} Around the time that he was at the private high school in Moscow, several people depicted him as a pale, introverted dreamer and an over-excitable romantic.{{sfn|Kjetsaa|1989|p=55}} The most descriptive account during this time was made by a Dr. Alexander Riesenkampf: "Feodor Mikhailovich was no less-good natured and no less courteous than his brother, but when not in a good mood he often looked at everything through dark glasses, became vexed, forgot good manners, and sometimes was carried away to the point of abusiveness and loss of self-awareness"; but "in the circle of his friends he always seemed lively, untroubled, self-content".{{sfn|Frank|1979|pp=114–5}} | |||
During the ] of 1877–1878, Dostoevsky asserted that war might be necessary if salvation were to be granted. He wanted the Muslim ] eliminated and the Christian ] restored, and he hoped for the liberation of ] Slavs and their unification with the Russian Empire.{{sfnp|Lantz|2004|pp=183–89}} | |||
As recorded by Baron Wrangel: "When came in, extremely reserved morose, his face pale and sickly and covered with freckles. His light-coloured hair was cut short, and he was of more than medium height. Intently looking at me with his sharp, grey-blue eyes, it seemed that he was trying to peer into my very soul – now what sort of man is he? ... ".{{sfn|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=149–50}} Herzen characterised Dostoyevsky as "a naive, not entirely lucid, but very nice person".{{sfn|Frank|2009|p=355}} | |||
=== Ethnic beliefs === | |||
On the first meeting with Dostoyevsky, Anna Snitkina described him as such: " was of average height, and he held himself erect. He had light brown, slightly reddish hair, he used some hair conditioner, and he combed his hair in a diligent way. I was struck by his eyes, they were different: one was dark brown; in the other, the pupil was so big that you could not see its color . The strangeness of his eyes gave Dostoyevsky some mysterious appearance. His face was pale, and it looked unhealthy..."{{sfn|Sekirin|1997|p=178}} | |||
Many characters in Dostoevsky's works, including ], have been described as displaying negative stereotypes.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Eberstadt |first1=Fernanda |author-link=Fernanda Eberstadt |date=1987 |title=Dostoevsky and the Jews |magazine=Commentary Magazine |url=https://www.commentarymagazine.com/articles/dostoevsky-and-the-Jews/ }}</ref> In an 1877 letter to Arkady Kovner, a Jew who had accused Dostoevsky of antisemitism, he replied with the following:<blockquote>"I am not an enemy of the Jews at all and never have been. But as you say, its 40-century existence proves that this tribe has exceptional vitality, which would not help, during the course of its history, taking the form of various Status in Statu ... how can they fail to find themselves, even if only partially, at variance with the indigenous population – the Russian tribe?"<ref>{{Cite book |editor-last1=Frank |editor-first1=Joseph |editor-last2=Goldstein |editor-first2=David I. |date=1989 |title=Selected Letters of Fyodor Dostoevsky |translator=Andrew Macandrew |publisher=] |isbn=9780813514536 |pages=437–8 }}</ref></blockquote> | |||
Dostoevsky also was negative towards ], depicting them negatively, and harboring negative opinions towards them personally.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Sucharski |first=Tadeusz |date=April 2021 |title=Kompleks Dostojewskiego czy kompleks Polaków? / Dostoyevsky's Complex or Poles' Complex? |url=https://www.ceeol.com/search/article-detail?id=986041 |journal=Studia Pigoniana|doi=10.12775/SP.2021.002 |doi-access=free }}</ref> | |||
===Epilepsy=== | |||
It cannot be known for certain when Dostoyevsky's first epileptic seizure occurred. Some have proposed the age of nine, while others have argued that it was in his teens or early adulthood. Dostoyevsky, however, wrote that his first seizure occurred after the "psychological torture" of the mock execution. In his notebook he recorded a total of 102 seizures in 20 years.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://neurophilosophy.wordpress.com/2007/04/16/diagnosing-dostoyevskys-epilepsy/|publisher=Neurophilosophy.com|accessdate=1 May 2012|title=Diagnosing Dostoyevsky's epilepsy|date=16 April 2007}}</ref> Some have thought Dostoyevsky suffered in adulthood from ], others ], and some a combination of these two. ] stated that he had "partial and secondarily generalised seizures with ecstatic ]", while ] believed that his seizures were "] generalised". P.H.A. Voskuil described "complex partial seizures with secondarily generalised nocturnal seizures and ecstatic auras". According to Rosetti and Bogousslavsky, Dostoyevsky suffered from "temporal lobe epilepsy, most likely left ], with complex partial and secondarily generalised seizures, with a relatively benign course".<ref>{{cite journal|url=http://www.acnr.co.uk/pdfs/volume6issue1/v6i1history.pdf|format=PDF|title=Dostoevsky and Epilepsy|author=Andrew Larner|publisher=ACNR – Advances in Clinical Neuroscience & Rehabilitation|accessdate=12 May 2012|volume=6|issue=1|date=March/April 2006}}</ref> | |||
Dostoevsky held to a ] ideology that was conditioned by the Ottoman occupations of Eastern Europe. In 1876, the Slavic populations of modern-day South-Eastern ] outside of the Principality of Serbia (independent since 1868) and of the region of ] rose up against their Ottoman overlords, but the rebellion was put down. In the process, an estimated 12,000 people were killed. In his diaries, he scorned Westerners and those who were against the Pan-Slavic movement. This ideology was motivated in part by the desire to promote a common Orthodox Christian heritage, which he saw as both unifying as well as a force for liberation.<ref>{{cite book |last=Dostoevsky |first=Fyodor |date=1919 |title=The Diary Of A Writer |others=translated and annotated by Boris Brasol |location=New York |publisher=George Braziller |page=779 |url=https://archive.org/details/the-diary-of-a-writer/The-Diary-Of-A-Writer/page/778/mode/2up |access-date=2022-01-26}}</ref> | |||
], the Austrian ], who linked epilepsy with hysteria, said the illness was caused by his father's death and suggested an ]. Freud discussed his theory of the link between epilepsy and hysteria in ''Dostoevsky and Parricide''. | |||
== |
=== Religious beliefs === | ||
] | |||
Dostoevsky was an ]{{sfnp|Pattison|Thompson|2001|loc=}} who was raised in a religious family and knew the ] from a very young age.{{sfnp|Frank|1979|p=401}} He was influenced by the Russian translation of Johannes Hübner's ''One Hundred and Four Sacred Stories from the Old and New Testaments Selected for Children'' (partly a German bible for children and partly a ]).{{sfnp|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=8–9}}{{sfnp|Frank|1979|p=401}}{{sfnp|Jones|2005|p=1}} He attended Sunday liturgies from an early age and took part in annual pilgrimages to the ].{{sfnp|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=7–9}} A deacon at the hospital gave him religious instruction.{{sfnp|Jones|2005|p=1}} Among his most cherished childhood memories were reciting prayers in front of guests and reading passages from the ] that impressed him while "still almost a child."{{sfnp|Frank|2010|loc=, 30}} | |||
===Political=== | |||
] | |||
In his youth, Dostoyevsky enjoyed reading ]'s ''History of the Russian State'', which praised ] and the independence of Russia from other countries, ideas which Dostoyevsky embraced in his late adulthood. Before his arrest due to participating in the ] in 1849, Dostoyevsky remarked, "As far as I am concerned, nothing was ever more ridiculous that the idea of a ] government in Russia". In an 1881 edition of his ''Diaries'', Dostoyevsky now favoured republicanism, stating that the tsar and people should form a unity: "For the people the tsar is not an external power, not the power of some conqueror... but a power of all the people, an all-unifiying power the people themselves desired, one they have nurtured in their hearts and have come to love, one for which they have suffered, because it was only through that power they expected their deliverance from the land of Egypt. For the people the tsar is the incarnation of themselves, of their whole idea, their hopes and their beliefs".{{sfn|Lantz|2004|pp=183-89}} | |||
According to an officer at the military academy, Dostoevsky was profoundly religious, followed Orthodox practice, and regularly read the Gospels and ]'s {{lang|de|Die Stunden der Andacht}} ("Hours of Devotion"), which "preached a sentimental version of Christianity entirely free from ]tic content and with a strong emphasis on giving Christian love a social application." This book may have prompted his later interest in ].{{sfnp|Jones|2005|p=2}} Through the literature of ], Balzac, ], and Goethe, Dostoevsky created his own belief system, similar to ] and the ].{{sfnp|Jones|2005|p=2}} After his arrest, aborted execution, and subsequent imprisonment, he focused intensely on the figure of Christ and on the New Testament: the only book allowed in prison.{{sfnp|Jones|2005|p=6}} In a January 1854 letter to the woman who had sent him the New Testament, Dostoevsky wrote that he was a "child of unbelief and doubt up to this moment, and I am certain that I shall remain so to the grave." He also wrote that "even if someone were to prove to me that the truth lay outside Christ, I should choose to remain with Christ rather than with the truth."{{sfnp|Jones|2005|p=7}} | |||
Dostoyevsky was critical of ], but was skeptical about the creation of a ], which he viewed as a "gentleman's rule". He instead proposed to educate the peasantry into the upper class. Dostoyevsky believed in an ]n Christianized Russia where "if everyone were actively Christian, not a single social question would come up....If they were Christians they would settle everything". He thought ] was a poor system and exemplifying the French disinterest of society and the country's future state. He maintained that political parties ultimately lead to social discord. Around the 1860s he discovered ]. A movement similar to ] it rejects ] and its contemporary views (such as ] and ]). However, as opposed to Slavophilism it does not intend to establish an isolated Russia, but a more open, ] state.{{sfn|Lantz|2004|pp=323-27}} In his incomplete "Socialism and Christianity", Dostoyevsky views ] as a turning point towards ] and loss of faith in God. He meant that the traditional concept of Christianity should be recovered. He views contemporary Europe as "lacking the instincts of the bee, which flawlessly and accurately construct their hives and anthills, people sought to construct something in the nature of a flawless human anthill. They rejected the single formula for their salvation that came from God and was proclaimed through revalation to humanity, 'Thou shalt love they neighbor as thyself', and replaced it with practical conclusions such as, {{'}}''Chacun pour soi et Dieu pour tous''{{'}} (Every man for himself and God for all), or scientific slogans such as ']'".{{sfn|Lantz|2004|pp=183-89}} | |||
In ], Dostoevsky revived his faith by looking frequently at the stars. Wrangel said that he was "rather pious, but did not often go to church, and disliked priests, especially the Siberian ones. But he spoke about Christ ecstatically." Two pilgrimages and two works by ], an archbishop who influenced Ukrainian and Russian literature by composing groundbreaking religious plays, strengthened his beliefs.{{sfnp|Frank|1979|pp=22–23}} Through his visits to western Europe and discussions with Herzen, ], and ], Dostoevsky discovered the '']'' movement and the theory that the ] had adopted the principles of ], ], ], and ] from ] and had passed on its philosophy to ] and consequently to ] socialism.{{sfnp|Jones|2005|pp=7–9}} | |||
Dostoyevsky differentiated three "enormous world ideas": ], which for him was post-], ] and pre-socialistic; ], while protesting against Catholicism, itself becomes no better than Catholicism as it will ultimately lose power and spirituality; ], which was for him the ideal Christianity. During the ], Dostoyevsky meant that war may be necessary if salvation is granted. He wanted to eliminate the Muslim ] and retrieve the Christian ]. Furthermore he hoped for a liberation of ] Slavs and unification with the Russian Empire.{{sfn|Lantz|2004|pp=183-89}} | |||
== Themes and style == | |||
===Religious=== | |||
{{Main|Themes in Fyodor Dostoevsky's writings}} | |||
Dostoyevsky was raised in a "pious Russian family" and knew the Gospel "almost from the cradle".{{sfn|Frank|1979|p=401}} He attended ] every Sunday from an early age,{{sfn|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=11, 19}} took part in annual ]s at the St. Sergius Trinity Monastery and was introduced to Christianity through the Russian translation of Johannes Hübner's ''One Hundred and Four Sacred Stories from the Old and New Testaments Selected for Children'', which was partly a German children's bible and partly a ].{{sfn|Kjetsaa|1989|p=19}}{{sfn|Frank|1979|p=401}}{{sfn|Jones|2005|p=1}} As well as having this material at home, Dostoyevsky was educated by a ] near the hospital.{{sfn|Jones|2005|p=1}} One of his most cherished childhood memories was the prayers in front of guests, and a reading from the ], which "made an impression on " when "still almost a child".{{sfn|Frank|2009|pp=24, 30}} | |||
]'']] | |||
According to an officer of the military academy, Dostoyevsky was deeply religious and orthodox and often read the Gospels and ]'s ''Die Stunden der Andacht'' (Hours of Devotion). The latter book "preached a sentimental version of Christianity entirely free from ]tic content and with a strong emphasis on giving Christian love a social application", which was perhaps his first introduction to ].{{sfn|Jones|2005|p=2}} Through the literature of Hoffmann, Balzac, ] and Goethe, Dostoyevsky created his own belief system similar to Russian ]arianism and ].{{sfn|Jones|2005|p=2}} After his arrest, subsequent mock execution and imprisonment in Siberia, his religious views focused significantly on Christ and the New Testament, the only book allowed in prison.{{sfn|Jones|2005|p=6}} In January 1854, Dostoyevsky wrote the following letter to a woman who had sent him the Testament: | |||
Dostoevsky's canon includes novels, novellas, ], short stories, essays, ]s, ], ]s and poems. He wrote more than 700 letters, a dozen of which are lost.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://az.lib.ru/d/dostoewskij_f_m/text_0680.shtml |script-title=ru:Достоевский Федор Михайлович: Стихотворения |language=ru |trans-title=Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoevsky: Poems |publisher=Lib.ru |access-date=5 November 2017}}</ref> | |||
{{quote|I have heard from many sources that you are very religious, Natalia Dmitrievna ... As for myself, I confess that I am a child of my age, a child of unbelief and doubt up to this moment, and I am certain that I shall remain so to the grave. What terrible torments this thirst to believe has cost me and continues to cost me, burning ever more strongly in my soul the more contrary arguments there are. Nevertheless, God sometimes sends me moments of complete tranquility. In such moments I love and find that I am loved by others, and in such moments I have nurtured in myself a symbol of truth, in which everything is clear and holy for me. This symbol is very simple: it is the belief that there is nothing finer, profounder, more attractive, more reasonable, more courageous and more perfect than Christ, and not only is there not, but I tell myself with jealous love that there cannot be. Even if someone were to prove to me that the truth lay outside Christ, I should choose to remain with Christ rather than with the truth.|Fyodor Dostoyevsky|Pisma, XXVIII, i, p. 176}} | |||
Dostoevsky expressed religious, psychological, and philosophical ideas in his writings. His works explore such themes as suicide, poverty, human manipulation, and morality. Psychological themes include dreaming, first seen in "White Nights",{{sfnp|Frank|2010|loc=}} and the father-son relationship, beginning in ''The Adolescent''.<ref>{{cite book|last=Catteau|first=Jacques|title=Dostoyevsky and the Process of Literary Creation|url={{google books|plainurl=y|id=P8thF_jlMWEC|page=282}}|date=1989|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=978-0-521-32436-6|page=282}}</ref> Most of his works demonstrate a vision of the chaotic sociopolitical structure of contemporary Russia.{{sfnp|Terras|1998|p=59}} His early works viewed society (for example, the differences between poor and rich) through the lens of ] and ]. The influences of other writers, particularly evident in his early works, led to accusations of ],{{sfnp|Terras|1998|p=14}}{{sfnp|Bloshteyn|2007|p=3}} but his style gradually became more individual. After his release from prison, Dostoevsky incorporated religious themes, especially those of Russian Orthodoxy, into his writing. Elements of ],{{sfnp|Lantz|2004|pp=167–70}} ],{{sfnp|Lantz|2004|pp=361–64}} and satire{{sfnp|Scanlan|2002|p=59}} are observable in some of his books. He frequently used autobiographical or semi-autobiographical details. | |||
In a meeting with Baron Wrangel, Dostoyevsky revived his belief in an ], ] Creator by viewing the spangled sky. Wrangel said that he was "rather pious, but did not often go to church, and disliked priests, especially the Siberian ones. But he spoke about Christ ecstatically". Both planned to translate Hegel's works and ]' '']'', and Dostoyevsky explored Islam when he asked his brother to send him a copy of the ]. Two pilgrimages and two works by the influential archbishop, ], who influenced Ukrainian and Russian literature and composed groundbreaking religious plays, strengthened his beliefs.{{sfn|Frank|1979|pp=22–3}} | |||
An important stylistic element in Dostoevsky's writing is ], the simultaneous presence of multiple narrative voices and perspectives.<ref name=Bakhtin1984_np>Bakhtin, M.M. (1984) ''Problems of Dostoevsky's Poetics''. Edited and translated by Caryl Emerson. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.</ref>{{Page needed|date=November 2023}} Kornelije Kvas wrote that Bakhtin's theory of "the polyphonic novel and Dostoevsky's dialogicness of narration postulates the non-existence of the 'final' word, which is why the thoughts, emotions and experiences of the world of the narrator and his/her characters are reflected through the words of another, with which they can never fully blend."<ref>{{Cite book |last=Kvas |first=Kornelije |date=2019 |title=The Boundaries of Realism in World Literature |translator=Novica Petrović |publisher=Lexington Books (Rowman & Littlefield) |isbn=978-1-7936-0910-6 |page=101 }}</ref> | |||
Through his visits to Europe and discussions with Herzen, ] and ], Dostoyevsky discovered Pochvennichestvo and the theory that the Catholic Church adopted the principles of ], ], ] and ] from ancient Rome and passed on its philosophy to Protestantism and finally to socialism, which leads to ].{{sfn|Jones|2005|p=7-9}} But as Dostoyevsky never explicitly stated his faith, his real beliefs are uncertain. One exception to this might be his April 1876 response to a question about a suicide in ''Diary of a Writer'', remarking that he was a "philosophical ]", originally a quote from ''The Adolescent'', though he did not mention that it was. However, Dostoyevsky said two months later in his ''Diaries'' that his heroine ] "died a ''deisté'', firmly believing in God and in the immortality of the Soul". But deists at that time held different ]. Furthermore his belief in doctrines such as the ], clearly discussed in ''The Brothers Karamazov'', for example,{{sfn|Pattison|Thompson|2001|p=136}} suggests that he did not quite understand the meaning of this term.{{sfn|Cassedy|2005|p=64}}{{sfn|Frank|2003|p=223}} Overall, many critics have pointed out that Dostoyevsky's religion is unusual and partially at odds with Christian core beliefs. Malcolm V. Jones has found elements of Islam and ] in his religious beliefs.{{sfn|Jones|2005|p=68-9}} | |||
== |
== Legacy == | ||
=== Reception and influence === | |||
{{Main|Themes in Fyodor Dostoyevsky's writings}} | |||
] | ] (Germany)]] | ||
Dostoyevsky's works comprise such themes as ], ], human manipulation and ]. His early works emphasized the ] and ] social life, that is the differences between poor and rich. Since his release, Dostoyevsky incorporated religious themes, particularly ], into his ]. "An explorer of ideas", Dostoyevsky manifested the "tumultuous period in Russian history", which was "undoubtedly shaped by the sociopolitical happenings he witnessed".{{sfn|Terras|1998|p=59}} Influences from other writers are clearly evident especially in his early works, leading to accusations of ],{{sfn|Terras|1998|p=14}}{{sfn|Bloshteyn|2007|p=3}} but his style gradually developed in the course of the years. Elements of ], ] and ] are inherent parts in some of his books. Apart from philosophical, psychological and religious themes, Dostoyevsky also wrote ]{{sfn|Cicovacki|2012|p=80}} and ]{{sfn|Lantz|2004|p=170}} literature. Dostoyevsky's oeuvre includes novels, novellas, ], ]s, ]s and even ]s.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://az.lib.ru/d/dostoewskij_f_m/text_0680.shtml|title=Достоевский Федор Михайлович: Стихотворения|trans_title=Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoyevsky: Poems|publisher=Lib.ru|language=Russian|accessdate=22 September 2012}}</ref> | |||
Dostoevsky is regarded as one of the greatest and most influential novelists of the ].{{sfnp|Lauer|2000|p=364}} ] admired some of Dostoevsky's works, particularly '']'', which he saw as exalted religious art, inspired by deep faith and love of humanity.{{sfnp|Frank|2010|p=369}}<ref name="Dosteoevsky">{{cite book |author=] |date=1921 |title=Fyodor Dostoyevsky: A Study |location=Honolulu, Hawaii |publisher=University Press of the Pacific |at=}}</ref> ] called Dostoevsky a "great religious writer" who explores "the mystery of spiritual existence".<ref>{{cite book |last=Vucinich |first=Alexander |author-link=Alexander Vucinich |date=2001 |title=Einstein and Soviet Ideology |publisher=] |isbn=978-0-8047-4209-2 |at= }}</ref> ] ranked Dostoevsky second only to ] as a creative writer,<ref>{{cite book |last=Freud |first=Sigmund |author-link=Sigmund Freud |date=1961 |title=The Standard Edition of the Complete Psychological Works of Sigmund Freud |url= |location= |publisher=The Hogarth Press |page=177 |isbn=}}</ref> and called ''The Brothers Karamazov'' "the most magnificent novel ever written".<ref>{{cite book |author=Rieff, Philip |date=1979 |title=Freud, the Mind of the Moralist |edition=3rd |publisher=University of Chicago Press |isbn=9780226716398 |at= |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/freudmindofmoral0000rief }}</ref> ] called Dostoevsky "the only psychologist from whom I had something to learn" and described him as being "among the most beautiful strokes of fortune in my life."{{sfnp|Müller|1982|p=7}}<ref>See. KSA 13, 14 and 15</ref>{{Missing long citation|date=November 2023}} The Russian literary theorist ]'s analysis of Dostoevsky came to be at the foundation of his theory of the novel. Bakhtin argued that Dostoevsky's use of ] was a major advancement in the development of the novel as a genre.{{r|Bakhtin1984_np}} | |||
===Style=== | |||
According to Strakhov, a close friend of Dostoyevsky's who wrote many memoirs describing the latter's writing attitudes and habits, " wrote late at night. Around midnight, when the whole house went to bed, he stayed alone, with his ], drinking not very strong, but almost cold tea, and writing until five or six o'clock in the morning. He got up around two or three o'clock in the afternoon."{{sfn|Sekirin|1997|p=153}} The lazy but hardworking Dostoyevsky wrote as fast as possible as he needed money badly. He also postponed the writing to the last possible day and only wrote when he had enough time to finish his work. It is not surprising that he often exceeded the time limit.{{sfn|Sekirin|1997|pp=152–53}} Dostoyevsky was known for his artistic writing. ] described the letters as beads from a necklace. He only knew one person who could write in such a manner: ].{{sfn|Sekirin|1997|p=66}} | |||
In his posthumous collection of sketches '']'', ] stated that in Dostoevsky "there were things believable and not to be believed, but some so true that they changed you as you read them; frailty and madness, wickedness and saintliness, and the insanity of gambling were there to know".<ref>{{cite book|url={{google books|plainurl=y|id=O5kw7ukXZ3gC|page=15}}|title=Hemingway's A Farewell To Arms: a Critical Study|first=Bhim S.|last=Dahiya|author-link=Bhim S. Dahiya|publisher=Academic Foundation|date=1992|page=15|isbn=978-81-269-0772-4}}</ref> ] praised Dostoevsky's prose: "... he is the man more than any other who has created modern prose, and intensified it to its present-day pitch. It was his explosive power which shattered the Victorian novel with its simpering maidens and ordered commonplaces; books which were without imagination or violence."<ref>{{cite book |last=Power |first=Arthur |date=2000 |title=Conversations with James Joyce |editor-last=Hart |editor-first=Clive |others=Introduction by David Norris |publisher=] |isbn=9781901866414 |pages=51–60 }}</ref> In her essay ''The Russian Point of View'', ] said, "Out of ] there is no more exciting reading".<ref>{{cite book |last=Woolf |first=Virginia |author-link=Virginia Woolf |date=1984 |chapter=Chapter 16: The Russian Point of View |editor-last=Mcneillie |editor-first=Andrew |title=The Common Reader |publisher=A Harvest Book – Harcourt |isbn=015602778X |at= |url=https://archive.org/details/commonreader00wool_0}}</ref> ] called Dostoevsky his "blood-relative"<ref>{{cite book|url={{google books|plainurl=y|id=x2_4TSvSO2gC|page=9}}|title=Kafka: Gothic and Fairytale|first1=Patrick |last1=Bridgwater|publisher=Rodopi|date=2003|page=9|isbn=978-90-420-1194-6}}</ref> and was heavily influenced by his works, particularly ''The Brothers Karamazov'' and ''Crime and Punishment'', both of which profoundly influenced '']''.<ref>{{cite journal |last=Struc |first=Roman S. |date=1981 |title=Kafka and Dostoevsky as 'Blood Relatives' |journal=Dostoevsky Studies |volume=2 |publisher=] – International Dostoevsky Society |pages=111–7 |url=http://sites.utoronto.ca/tsq/DS/02/111.shtml |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121004214338/http://www.utoronto.ca/tsq/DS/02/111.shtml |archive-date=4 October 2012}}</ref> ] enjoyed Dostoevsky's work and said that to read him is like a "glimpse into the havoc".{{sfnp|Müller|1982|p=8}} The Norwegian novelist ] wrote that "no one has analyzed the complicated human structure as Dostoyevsky. His psychologic sense is overwhelming and visionary."{{sfnp|Lavrin|1947|p=161}} Writers associated with cultural movements such as ], ] and the ] cite Dostoevsky as an influence,{{sfnp|Bloshteyn|2007|p=5}} and he is regarded as a forerunner to ],{{sfnp|Lavrin|2005|p=38}} ]{{sfnp|Burry|2011|p=57}} and psychoanalysis.{{sfnp|Breger|2008|p=270}} | |||
===Criticism=== | |||
Dostoyevsky's work has not always met with a positive reception. Several critics, such as ], ] and ], found that while his writing successfully explored psychological and philosophical themes, its artistic quality was "below criticism". Others found fault in chaotic and disorganised plots, while still others, such as Turgenev, in "excessive psychologising", or in a ] that was too detailed. His characters were called "unrealistic, schematic and contrived". His style was deemed to be "prolix, repetitious and lacking in polish, balance, restraint and good taste". ''The Idiot'', ''The Possessed'' and ''The Brothers Karamazov'' were criticised for including unrealistic characters by critics such as ], ] and ], They were described as "puppets", as "pale, pretentious and artificial", which is not what should be found in ] literature. The puppet-like appearance was compared with Hoffmann's characters, an author whom Dostoyevsky admired.{{sfn|Terras|1998|pp=3–4}} | |||
] featured Dostoevsky as the protagonist in his 1997 novel '']''. The famous ] novel '']'' by ] deals with the life of Dostoevsky and his love affair with ].<ref>{{cite news |title='Oru Sankeerthanam Pole' goes into 100th edition |url=https://www.newindianexpress.com/states/kerala/2017/nov/26/oru-sankeerthanam-pole-goes-into-100th-edition-1711185.html |work=] |issue=26 November 2017}}</ref> | |||
Basing his estimation on a stated criteria of enduring art and individual genius, Nabokov judged Dostoyevsky as "not a great writer, but rather a mediocre one—with flashes of excellent humor but, alas, with wastelands of literary platitudes in between." Compiling a list he demonstrates and complains that the novels are peopled by "neurotics and lunatics" and notes that Dostoyevsky's characters do not develop. "We get them all complete at the beginning of the tale and so they remain." He finds the novels full of contrived "surprises and complications of plot", which when first read are effective; but upon a second reading, and without the shock and benefit of these surprises, the books appear loaded with "glorified cliché".<ref name=Nabakov>{{cite book|last=Nabokov|first=Vladamir|title=Lectures on Russian Literature|year=1981|publisher=www.harcourtbooks.com|isbn=0-15-602776-3|pages=97-135}}</ref> | |||
== |
=== Honours === | ||
] | |||
]]] | |||
Together with Leo Tolstoy, and despite some criticism about his puppet-like characters and the off-topic verbiages, Dostoyevsky is often regarded as one of the greatest and most influential novelists of the ].{{sfn|Lauer|2000|p=364}} The publication of his debut novel, ''Poor Folk'', pushed him into the literary mainstream, and critics saw him as a rising star of Russian literature. He was known for his gifted narrative, and through his sharp and often deep and sophisticated treatment of intellectual and political discussions he was described as a spiritual guide, a teacher and even a ].{{sfn|Müller|1982|p=7}} | |||
In 1956 an olive-green postage stamp dedicated to Dostoevsky was released in the Soviet Union, with a ] of 1,000 copies.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.stamprussia.com/56.htm |title=Russian Postage Stamps of 1956–1960 |publisher={{interlanguage link|Soyuzpechat|ru|Союзпечать}} |access-date=5 November 2017}}</ref> A ] was opened on 12 November 1971 in the apartment where he wrote his first and final novels.<ref>{{cite web |title=Museum |publisher=] |language=ru |url=http://eng.md.spb.ru/museum/ |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080117112658/http://eng.md.spb.ru/museum/ |url-status=dead |archive-date=17 January 2008 |access-date=5 November 2017 }}</ref> ] was named after him in 1979, and a ] discovered in 1981 by ] was named ]. Music critic and broadcaster ] has hosted the radio show "FM Достоевский" (FM Dostoevsky) since 1997.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://finam.fm/broadcast/29/|script-title=ru:Радио ФИНАМ ФМ 99.6|language=ru|publisher=ФИНАМ|access-date=20 April 2013}}</ref> Viewers of the TV show '']'' voted him the ninth greatest Russian of all time, just after ], and just ahead of ruler ].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.nameofrussia.ru/rating.html |script-title=ru:Результаты Интернет голосования |language=ru |trans-title=Internet voting results |publisher=] |access-date=5 November 2017 |archive-date=27 August 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170827115011/http://www.nameofrussia.ru/rating.html |url-status=dead }}</ref> An ]-winning TV series directed by ] about Dostoevsky's life was screened in 2011. | |||
Dostoyevsky's works also attracted readers outside of Russia. The German translator Wilhelm Wolfsohn published one of the first translations, parts of ''Poor Folk'', in an 1846/1847 magazine,{{sfn|Meier-Gräfe|1988|p=492}} and a French translation followed. The first English translations were provided by Marie von Thilo in 1881, and the first acclaimed translations into English were produced between 1912 and 1920 by ].{{sfn|Jones|Terry|2010|p=216}} | |||
Numerous memorials were inaugurated in cities and regions such as Moscow, Saint Petersburg, ], Omsk, Semipalatinsk, Kusnetsk, Darovoye, Staraya Russa, ], ], ], Baden-Baden and ]. The ] was opened on 30 December 1991, and the ] was opened on 19 June 2010, the 75th anniversary of the ]. The Moscow station is decorated with murals by artist ] depicting scenes from Dostoevsky's works, such as controversial suicides.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://engl.mosmetro.ru/pages/page_6.php?id_page=561 |title=Liublinsko-Dmitrovskaya Line / Dostoevskaya |publisher=] |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120310104241/http://engl.mosmetro.ru/pages/page_6.php?id_page=561 |archive-date=10 March 2012}}</ref><ref name="NPR.org 2010">{{cite web | title=A Dark View Of Dostoevsky On The Moscow Subway | website=NPR |first1=David |last1=Greene | date=9 August 2010 | url=https://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=128954859 | access-date=25 November 2020 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210204012553/https://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=128954859 |archive-date= Feb 4, 2021 }}</ref> | |||
] | |||
In 2021, ] celebrated the 200th anniversary of Dostoevsky's birth.<ref>{{cite web |last=Babich |first=Dmitry |date=10 November 2021 |title=Dostoyevsky's 200th Anniversary Celebrated in Kazakhstan, the Land of His Formative Years |website=The Astana Times |url=https://astanatimes.com/2021/11/dostoyevskys-200th-anniversary-celebrated-in-kazakhstan-the-land-of-his-formative-years/ |access-date=2021-11-10 }}</ref> | |||
Many non-Russians have been introduced to Dostoyevsky's works. German philosopher ] called Dostoyevsky "the only psychologist, incidentally, from whom I had something to learn; he ranks among the most beautiful strokes of fortune in my life ... "{{sfn|Müller|1982|p=7}} ] advised reading his novels in their entirety. ] enjoyed Dostoyevsky's work; he also cautioned that to read him is like a "glimpse into the havoc".{{sfn|Müller|1982|p=8}} The Norwegian novelist ] wrote that "no one has analysed the complicated human structure as Dostoyevsky. His psychologic sense is overwhelming and visionary. We have no yardstick by which to assess his greatness".{{sfn|Lavrin|1947|p=161}} ] said that Dostoyevsky "should be put beside ] and Nietzsche; he is equal in size to these three, and maybe the most important".{{sfn|Lavrin|1947|p=162}} | |||
=== Criticism === | |||
In a letter to Gide by ]: " is the cocaine and morphia of modern literature".{{sfn|Bloshteyn|2007|p=3}} ] acknowledged Dostoyevsky as one of those writers who had influenced his work. In his posthumously published collection of sketches '']'', Hemingway stated that in Dostoevsky "there were things believable and not to be believed, but some so true that they changed you as you read them; frailty and madness, wickedness and saintliness, and the insanity of gambling were there to know." | |||
Dostoevsky's work did not always gain a positive reception. Some critics, such as ], ] and ], viewed his writing as excessively psychological and philosophical rather than artistic. Others found fault with chaotic and disorganised plots, and others, like Turgenev, objected to "excessive psychologising" and too-detailed naturalism. His style was deemed "prolix, repetitious and lacking in polish, balance, restraint and good taste". ], ] and others criticised his puppet-like characters, most prominently in ''The Idiot'', '']'' (''The Possessed'', ''The Devils'')<ref name="Demons-Possessed">The 1872 novel ″Demons″, {{langx|ru|link=no|Бесы}}, ''Bésy'', by Fyodor Dostoevsky is sometimes also titled ''The Possessed'' or ''The Devils''</ref> and ''The Brothers Karamazov''. These characters were compared to those of Hoffmann, an author whom Dostoevsky admired.{{sfn|Terras|1998|pp=3–4}} | |||
Basing his estimation on stated criteria of enduring art and individual genius, Nabokov judges Dostoevsky "not a great writer, but rather a mediocre one—with flashes of excellent humour but, alas, with wastelands of literary platitudes in between." Nabokov complains that the novels are peopled by "neurotics and lunatics" and states that Dostoevsky's characters do not develop: "We get them all complete at the beginning of the tale and so they remain." He finds the novels full of contrived "surprises and complications of plot", which are effective when first read, but on second reading, without the shock and benefit of these surprises, appear loaded with "glorified cliché".<ref name=Nabokov>{{cite book|last=Nabokov|first=Vladamir|title=Lectures on Russian Literature|date=1981|publisher=Harvest Book/Harcourt|isbn=978-0-15-602776-2|pages=97–135}}</ref> The Scottish poet and critic ], however, addressed criticism regarding the quality of Dostoevsky's characters, noting that "regarding the 'oddness' of Dostoevsky's characters, it has been pointed out that they perhaps only seem 'pathological', whereas in reality they are 'only visualized more clearly than any figures in imaginative literature'."<ref>{{cite book |last=Dostoevsky |first=Fyodor |title=The Karamazov Brothers |publisher=OUP Oxford |isbn=9780191647802 |publication-date=June 12, 2008 |pages=xx}}</ref> | |||
According to Arthur Power's ''Conversations with ]'', Joyce praised Dostoyevsky's prose: " ... he is the man more than any other who has created modern prose, and intensified it to its present-day pitch. It was his explosive power which shattered the Victorian novel with its simpering maidens and ordered commonplaces; books which were without imagination or violence."<ref>{{cite book|url=http://www.utoronto.ca/tsq/DS/05/167.shtml|title=Conversations with James Joyce|author=Arthur Power, James Joyce|publisher=University of Toronto|pages=51–60|isbn=978-1-901-86641-4}}</ref> | |||
=== Reputation === | |||
]]] | |||
Dostoevsky's books have been translated into more than 170 languages.{{sfnp|Kjetsaa|1989|p=foreword}} The German translator Wilhelm Wolfsohn published one of the first translations, parts of ''Poor Folk'', in an 1846–1847 magazine,{{sfnp|Meier-Gräfe|1988|p=492}} and a French translation followed. French, German and Italian translations usually came directly from the original, while English translations were second-hand and of poor quality.{{sfnp|Bloshteyn|2007|p=26}} The first English translations were by Marie von Thilo in 1881, but the first highly regarded ones were produced between 1912 and 1920 by ].{{sfnp|Jones|Terry|2010|p=216}} Her flowing and easy translations helped popularise Dostoevsky's novels in anglophone countries, and Bakhtin's ''Problems of Dostoevsky's Creative Art'' (1929) (republished and revised as '']'' in 1963) provided further understanding of his style.<ref>{{cite book|last=France|first=Peter|title=The Oxford Guide to Literature in English Translation|url={{google books|plainurl=y|id=pmNoS2dndKsC|page=594}}|date=2001|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-818359-4|pages=594–98}}</ref> | |||
Dostoevsky's works were interpreted in film and on stage in many different countries. Princess Varvara Dmitrevna Obolenskaya was among the first to propose staging ''Crime and Punishment''. Dostoevsky did not refuse permission, but he advised against it, as he believed that "each art corresponds to a series of poetic thoughts, so that one idea cannot be expressed in another non-corresponding form". His extensive explanations in opposition to the transposition of his works into other media were groundbreaking in fidelity criticism. He thought that just one episode should be dramatised, or an idea should be taken and incorporated into a separate plot.{{sfnp|Burry|2011|p=3}} According to critic Alexander Burry, some of the most effective adaptions are ]'s opera '']'', ]'s opera '']'', ]'s film '']'' and ]'s film '']''.{{sfnp|Burry|2011|p=5}} | |||
In her essay ''The Russian Point of View'', ] said: "The novels of Dostoevsky are seething whirlpools, gyrating sandstorms, waterspouts which hiss and boil and suck us in. They are composed purely and wholly of the stuff of the soul. Against our wills we are drawn in, whirled round, blinded, suffocated, and at the same time filled with a giddy rapture. Out of ] there is no more exciting reading".<ref>{{cite book|url=http://etext.library.adelaide.edu.au/w/woolf/virginia/w91c/chapter16.html|chapter=Chapter 16: The Russian Point of View|first=Virginia|last=Woolf|title=The Common Reader|publisher=Houghton Mifflin Harcourt|isbn=978-0-1560-2778-6}}</ref> ] named Dostoyevsky as his "blood-relative",<ref>"Briefe an Felice", ed. E. Heller and J. Born (Frankfurt, S. Fischer, 1967), p. 460.</ref> and was heavily influenced by his works, especially ''The Brothers Karamazov'' and ''Crime and Punishment'', both of which had a profound effect on '']''.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.utoronto.ca/tsq/DS/02/111.shtml|title=Kafka and Dostoevsky as "Blood Relatives"|publisher=University of Toronto|author=Roman S. Struc|accessdate=8 June 2012}}</ref> Sigmund Freud called his last work "the most significant novel ever written".<ref>{{cite book|title=Freud, the Mind of the Moralist|author=Rieff, Philip|publisher=University of Chicago Press|year=1979|edition=3rd|page=132|isbn=9780226716398}}</ref> Left-wing groups such as the ], the ]s and the ] named Dostoyevsky as their influence.{{sfn|Bloshteyn|2007|p=5}} Dostoyevsky is cited as the forerunner of ],{{sfn|Lavrin2|2005|p=38}} existentialism,{{sfn|Bloom|2004|p=108}} ]{{sfn|Burry|2011|p=57}} and ].{{sfn|Breger|2008|p=270}} | |||
After the ], passages of Dostoevsky books were sometimes shortened, although only two books were censored: ''Demons''<ref>{{cite web |title= |work=Forbidden Books of Russian Writers and Literary Scientists, 1917–1991 |language=ru |url=http://www.opentextnn.ru/censorship/russia/sov/libraries/books/blium/ilp/?id=344 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170729223705/http://www.opentextnn.ru/censorship/russia/sov/libraries/books/blium/ilp/?id=344|url-status=dead |archive-date=29 July 2017 |access-date=31 August 2013 }}</ref> and ''Diary of a Writer''.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.opentextnn.ru/censorship/russia/sov/libraries/books/blium/ilp/kritik/?id=579|title=3.3. Книги об отдельных писателях|work=Forbidden Books of Russian Writers and Literary Scientists, 1917–1991|access-date=31 August 2013|archive-date=20 February 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180220061102/http://opentextnn.ru/censorship/russia/sov/libraries/books/blium/ilp/kritik/?id=579|url-status=dead}}</ref> His philosophy, particularly in ''Demons'', was deemed anti-capitalist but also anti-Communist and reactionary.{{sfnp|Bloshteyn|2007|pp=7–8}}<ref>Lenin read Dostoevsky in a more-nuanced way than others, describing ''Demons'' (1871–72) as "repulsive but great". See {{cite book |last1=Waite |first1=Geoff |last2=Cernia Slovin |first2=Francesca |date=2016 |chapter=Nietzsche with Dostoevsky: Unrequited Collaborators in Crime without Punishment |editor1=Jeff Love |editor2=Jeffrey Metzger |title=Nietzsche and Dostoevsky: Philosophy, Morality, Tragedy |location=Chicago |publisher=Northwestern University Press |isbn=9780810133969 }} For a summary of the Soviet reception of Dostoevsky, see {{cite book |last=Shlapentokh |first=Vladimir |date=1990 |title=Soviet Intellectuals and Political Power: The Post-Stalin Era |edition=1st |publisher=Princeton Univ. Press |isbn=9780691094595 |page=94 }}</ref> According to historian Boris Ilizarov, Stalin read Dostoevsky's ''The Brothers Karamazov'' several times.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://gazeta-pravda.ru/content/view/115/ |script-title=ru:Враньё от юного папуаса |language=ru |trans-title=Fids from a young Papuan |author=Vladimir Bushin |work=] |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131029201750/http://gazeta-pravda.ru/content/view/115/ |archive-date=29 October 2013}}</ref> | |||
After the ], Dostoyevsky's books were often censored or banned. His philosophy, especially in ''The Demons'', was deemed ] and anti-communist, leading ] to nickname the author "our evil genius". Reading Dostoyevsky was forbidden, and those who did not observe this law were imprisoned. During the Second World War, however, his works were used as propaganda by both the Soviets and the ], and after the war the prohibition law in the ] was overturned. His 125th anniversary in 1947 was celebrated throughout Russia; despite this, his novels were banned again until ]'s accession to power ten years later, following ] and a softening of repressive laws.{{sfn|Bloshteyn|2007|pp=7–8}} | |||
== Works == | |||
In the second half of the twentieth century, his works topped the best-seller lists worldwide. Philosophers, psychologists, theologians, politicians, literary critics, physicians, lawyers and students acknowledged his works, and many of his novels and short stories were filmed and dramatised in the Soviet Union and the West.{{sfn|Müller|1982|p=8}} Dostoyevsy's fictional characters and his work overall were popularised in ], in presidential speeches, ], films and plays.{{sfn|Bloshteyn|2007|p=4}} | |||
Dostoevsky's works of fiction include 16 novels and novellas, 16 short stories, and 5 translations. Many of his longer novels were first published in ] in literary magazines and journals. The years given below indicate the year in which the novel's final part or first complete book edition was published. In English many of his novels and stories are known by different titles. | |||
=== Major works === | |||
In 1956 an olive-green postage stamp dedicated to Dostoyevsky was released in the Soviet Union with a ] of 1,000 copies.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.stamprussia.com/56.htm|publisher=CPA – "Souzpechat" Central Philatelic Agency|title=USSR (Soviet Union) Postage – Stamps: 1956–1960|accessdate=10 May 2012}}</ref> A ] was opened on 12 November 1971 in the apartment where he wrote his first and last novels.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://eng.md.spb.ru/museum/|title=Museum|publisher=Fyodor Dostoevsky Literary Memorial Museum|accessdate=10 May 2012}}</ref> A ] was discovered in 1981 by ] and named ]. Viewers of the TV show '']'' voted him the ninth greatest Russian of all time, behind chemist ] and ahead of the Russian ruler ].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.nameofrussia.ru/rating.html|title=Результаты Интернет голосования|trans_title=Internet voting results|language=Russian|publisher=Name of Russia|accessdate=15 May 2012}}</ref> A ] station on the ] was scheduled to open to the public on 15 May, the 75th anniversary of the Moscow Metro; illustrations on the ] made by artist ] were criticised because of their depiction of suicides, but did not hinder the opening of ] on 19 June 2010.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://engl.mosmetro.ru/pages/page_6.php?id_page=561|title=Liublinsko-Dmitrovskaya Line|publisher=Moscow Metro|accessdate=10 May 2012}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://rt.com/news/moscow-metro-station-suicides/|publisher=TV-Novosti|work=]|title=Opening delayed for Moscow metro's "station of suicides"|date=15 May 2010|accessdate=10 May 2012}}</ref> | |||
==== ''Poor Folk'' ==== | |||
{{Main|Poor Folk}} | |||
''Poor Folk'' is an ] that depicts the relationship between the small, elderly official Makar Devushkin and the young seamstress Varvara Dobroselova, remote relatives who write letters to each other. Makar's tender, sentimental adoration for Varvara and her confident, warm friendship for him explain their evident preference for a simple life, although it keeps them in humiliating poverty. An unscrupulous merchant finds the inexperienced girl and hires her as his housewife and guarantor. He sends her to a manor somewhere on a steppe, while Makar alleviates his misery and pain with alcohol. | |||
Four of Dostoyevsky's books, ''Crime and Punishment'', ''The Possessed'', ''The Idiot'' and ''The Brothers Karamazov'', are included on the list of ]. | |||
The story focuses on poor people who struggle with their lack of self-esteem. Their misery leads to the loss of their inner freedom, to dependence on the social authorities, and to the extinction of their individuality. Dostoevsky shows how poverty and dependence are indissolubly aligned with deflection and deformation of self-esteem, combining inward and outward suffering.{{sfnp|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=69–103}} | |||
== Works == | |||
==== ''Notes from Underground'' ==== | |||
Dostoyevsky's works of fiction include 15 novels and novellas, 17 short stories, and 5 translations. Many of his longer novels were first published in ] in ]s and ]s (see the individual articles). The years given below indicate the year in which the novel's final part or first complete book edition was published. In English many of his novels and stories are known by several titles. | |||
{{Main|Notes from Underground}} | |||
<!--===Bibliography=== should not have two sections with this name --> | |||
''Notes from Underground'' is split into two stylistically different parts, the first essay-like, the second in narrative style. The protagonist and ] is an unnamed 40-year-old civil servant known as The Underground Man. The only known facts about his situation are that he has quit the service, lives in a basement flat on the outskirts of Saint Petersburg and finances his livelihood from a modest inheritance. | |||
'''Plays''' | |||
* (~1844) ''The Jew Yankel'' (unknown whether finished or not; title based on Gogol's character from '']'') | |||
The first part is a record of his thoughts about society and his character. He describes himself as vicious, squalid and ugly; the chief focuses of his ] are the "modern human" and his vision of the world, which he attacks severely and cynically, and towards which he develops aggression and vengefulness. He considers his own decline natural and necessary. Although he emphasises that he does not intend to publish his notes for the public, the narrator appeals repeatedly to an ill-described audience, whose questions he tries to address. | |||
In the second part he describes scenes from his life that are responsible for his failure in personal and professional life and in his love life. He tells of meeting old school friends, who are in secure positions and treat him with condescension. His aggression turns inward on to himself and he tries to humiliate himself further. He presents himself as a possible saviour to the poor prostitute Liza, advising her to reject self-reproach when she looks to him for hope. Dostoevsky added a short commentary saying that although the storyline and characters are fictional, such things were inevitable in contemporary society. | |||
The Underground Man was very influential for philosophers. His alienated existence from the mainstream influenced ].<ref>{{cite book |last=Halliwell |first=Martin |date=2006 |title=Transatlantic Modernism: Moral Dilemmas in Modernist Fiction |publisher=Edinburgh University Press |isbn=978-0-7486-2393-8 |page=13 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=RXLT4Gu4aQ4C }}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last=Eysteinsson |first=Ástráður |date=1990 |title=The Concept of Modernism |publisher=Cornell University Press |isbn=978-0-8014-8077-5 |page=29 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=peKRAu4U458C&pg=PA29 }}</ref> | |||
==== ''Crime and Punishment'' ==== | |||
{{Main|Crime and Punishment}} | |||
The novel ''Crime and Punishment'' has received both critical and popular acclaim. It remains one of the most influential and widely read novels in ],<ref>{{cite web |title=Greatest Russian Novels of All Time |website=Goodreads |url=https://www.goodreads.com/list/show/17853.Greatest_Russian_Novels_of_All_Time |access-date=21 July 2020 }}</ref> and has been sometimes described as Dostoevsky's magnum opus.<ref>{{cite book |last=Arntfield |first=Michael |date=2017 |title=Murder in Plain English |location=New York City |publisher=Prometheus |page=42 |isbn=9781633882546 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=3l9xDAAAQBAJ&pg=PA42 }}</ref> | |||
''Crime and Punishment'' follows the mental anguish and moral dilemmas of ], an impoverished ex-student in ] who plans to kill an unscrupulous pawnbroker, an old woman who stores money and valuable objects in her flat. He theorises that with the money he could liberate himself from poverty and go on to perform great deeds, and seeks to convince himself that certain crimes are justifiable if they are committed in order to remove obstacles to the higher goals of 'extraordinary' men. Once the deed is done, however, he finds himself racked with confusion, paranoia, and disgust. His theoretical justifications lose all their power as he struggles with guilt and horror and confronts both the internal and external consequences of his deed. | |||
] remarked that "Only ''Crime and Punishment'' was read in 1866" and that Dostoevsky had managed to portray a Russian person aptly and realistically.{{sfnp|Kjetsaa|1989|p=183}} In contrast, ] of the radical magazine '']'' called the novel a "fantasy according to which the entire student body is accused without exception of attempting murder and robbery".{{sfnp|Frank|1997|p=45, 60–182}} The '']'' describes ''Crime and Punishment'' as "a masterpiece" and "one of the finest studies of the psychopathology of guilt written in any language."<ref>{{cite encyclopedia | last1=Cregan-Reid |first1=Vybarr |last2=Bauer |first2=Pat |authorlink1=Vybarr Cregan-Reid |title=Crime and Punishment |encyclopedia=Encyclopædia Britannica |url=https://www.britannica.com/topic/Crime-and-Punishment-novel | access-date=21 July 2020 }}</ref> | |||
==== ''The Idiot'' ==== | |||
{{Main|The Idiot}} | |||
The title is an ironic reference to the central character of the novel, ] ], a young man whose goodness, open-hearted simplicity and guilelessness lead many of the more worldly characters he encounters to mistakenly assume that he lacks intelligence and insight. In the character of Prince Myshkin, Dostoevsky set himself the task of depicting "the positively good and beautiful man."<ref>{{cite book|last1=Dostoevsky letter quoted in Peace|first1=Richard|title=Dostoyevsky: An Examination of the Major Novels|date=1971|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=0-521-07911-X|pages=59–63}}</ref> The novel examines the consequences of placing such a singular individual at the centre of the conflicts, desires, passions and egoism of worldly society, both for the man himself and for those with whom he becomes involved. | |||
] describes ''The Idiot'' as "the most personal of all Dostoevsky's major works, the book in which he embodies his most intimate, cherished, and sacred convictions."{{sfnp|Frank|2010|loc=}} It includes descriptions of some of his most intense personal ordeals, such as ] and ], and explores moral, spiritual and philosophical themes consequent upon them. His primary motivation in writing the novel was to subject his own highest ideal, that of true Christian love, to the crucible of contemporary Russian society. | |||
==== ''Demons'' ==== | |||
{{Main|Demons (Dostoevsky novel)}} | |||
''Demons'' is a social and political satire, a psychological drama, and large-scale tragedy. ] has described it as "Dostoevsky's most confused and violent novel, and his most satisfactorily 'tragic' work."<ref>{{cite journal |last=Oates |first=Joyce Carol |date=January 1978 |title=The tragic vision of ''The Possessed'' |journal=The Georgia Review |volume=32 |issue=4 – Winter 1978 |page=868 }} See also in .</ref> According to ], it is Dostoevsky's "greatest onslaught on Nihilism", and "one of humanity's most impressive achievements—perhaps even its supreme achievement—in the art of prose fiction."{{sfnp|Hingley|1978|pp=158–9}} | |||
''Demons'' is an ] of the potentially catastrophic consequences of the ] and ] that were becoming prevalent in Russia in the 1860s.<ref>{{cite journal |last=Rollberg |first=Peter |date=2014 |title=Mastermind, Terrorist, Enigma: Dostoevsky's Nikolai Stavrogin |journal=Perspectives on Political Science |volume=43 |issue=3 |pages=143–52|doi=10.1080/10457097.2014.917244 |s2cid=145671815 }}</ref> A fictional town descends into chaos as it becomes the focal point of an attempted revolution, orchestrated by master conspirator Pyotr Verkhovensky. The mysterious aristocratic figure of Nikolai Stavrogin—Verkhovensky's counterpart in the moral sphere—dominates the book, exercising an extraordinary influence over the hearts and minds of almost all the other characters. The idealistic, Western-influenced generation of the 1840s, epitomized in the character of Stepan Verkhovensky (who is both Pyotr Verkhovensky's father and Nikolai Stavrogin's childhood teacher), is presented as the unconscious progenitors and helpless accomplices of the "demonic" forces that take possession of the town. | |||
==== ''The Brothers Karamazov'' ==== | |||
{{Main|The Brothers Karamazov}} | |||
''The Brothers Karamazov'' is Dostoevsky's largest work. It received both critical and popular acclaim and is often cited as his '']''.{{sfnp|Frank|2003|pp=390–441}} Composed of 12 "books", the novel tells the story of the novice ], the non-believer Ivan Karamazov, and the soldier Dmitri Karamazov. The first books introduce the Karamazovs. The main plot is the death of their father Fyodor, while other parts are philosophical and religious arguments by Father Zosima to Alyosha.{{sfnp|Frank|1997|pp=567–705}}{{sfnp|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=337–414}} | |||
The most famous chapter is "]", a ] told by Ivan to Alyosha about Christ's ] in ], Spain, in which Christ is imprisoned by a ninety-year-old Catholic ]. Instead of answering him, Christ gives him a kiss, and the Inquisitor subsequently releases him, telling him not to return. The tale was misunderstood as a defence of the Inquisitor, but some, such as ], have argued that the Christ of the parable was Ivan's own interpretation of Christ, "the idealistic product of the unbelief". Ivan, however, has stated that he is against Christ. Most contemporary critics and scholars agree that Dostoevsky is attacking Roman Catholicism and socialist atheism, both represented by the Inquisitor. He warns the readers against a terrible revelation in the future, referring to the ] around 750 and the ] in the 16th century, which in his view corrupted true Christianity.{{sfnp|Müller|1982|pp=91–103}}{{sfnp|Frank|1997|pp=567–705}}{{sfnp|Kjetsaa|1989|pp=337–414}} | |||
] wrote an essay called "]" (German: Dostojewski und die Vatertötung) as an introductory article to a scholarly collection on ''The Brothers Karamazov''. | |||
=== Bibliography === | |||
{{Main|Fyodor Dostoevsky bibliography}} | |||
{{col-begin}} | {{col-begin}} | ||
{{col-2}} | {{col-2}} | ||
==== Novels and novellas ==== | |||
* (1846) '']'' | * (1846) '']'' | ||
* (1846) '']'' | * (1846) '']'' | ||
* (1847) '']'' (novella) | |||
* (1849) '']'' (unfinished) | * (1849) '']'' (unfinished) | ||
* (1859) '']'' | * (1859) '']'' (novella) | ||
* (1859) '']'' | * (1859) '']'' | ||
* (1861) '']'' | * (1861) '']'' | ||
* (1862) '']'' | * (1862) '']'' | ||
* (1864) '']'' | * (1864) '']'' (novella) | ||
* (1866) '']'' | * (1866) '']'' | ||
* ( |
* (1866) '']'' | ||
* (1869) '']'' | * (1869) '']'' | ||
* (1870) '']'' | * (1870) '']'' | ||
* (1872) '']'' | * (1872) '']'' (also titled: ''The Possessed'', ''The Devils'')<ref name="Demons-Possessed" /> | ||
* (1875) '']'' | * (1875) '']'' | ||
* (1880) '']'' | * (1880) '']'' | ||
{{col-2}} | {{col-2}} | ||
==== Short stories ==== | |||
* (1846) "]" | * (1846) "]" | ||
* (1847) "Novel in Nine Letters" | * (1847) "Novel in Nine Letters" | ||
* (1848) "]" (merger of "Another Man's Wife" and "A Jealous Husband") | |||
* (1847) "The Landlady" | |||
* (1848) "The Jealous Husband" | |||
* (1848) "A Weak Heart" | * (1848) "A Weak Heart" | ||
* (1848) "Polzunkov" | * (1848) "Polzunkov" | ||
* (1848) "]" | * (1848) "]" | ||
* (1848) "]" | * (1848) "]" | ||
* (1848) "]" | * (1848) "]" | ||
* (1849) "A Little Hero" | * (1849) "A Little Hero" | ||
* (1862) "]" | * (1862) "]" | ||
* (1865) "]" | * (1865) "]" | ||
* (1873) "]" | * (1873) "]" | ||
* (1876) "]" (also titled: "The Beggar Boy at Christ's Christmas Tree")<ref>{{cite book |last=Dostoyefsky |first=F.M. |date=1920 |chapter=A Beggar Boy at Christ's Christmas Tree |title=Little Russian Masterpieces |others=Chosen and translated by Zénaïde A. Ragozin. Introduction and biographical notes by S.N. Syromiatnikof |location=New York |publisher=G.P. Putnam's Sons |page=172 |url=https://archive.org/details/littlerussianmas00ragouoft/page/n7/mode/2up }}</ref> | |||
* (1876) "The Heavenly Christmas Tree" | |||
* (1876) "]" | * (1876) "]" (also titled: "The Meek One") | ||
* (1876) "]" | * (1876) "]" | ||
* (1877) "]" | * (1877) "]" | ||
{{col-end}} | {{col-end}} | ||
==== Essay collections ==== | |||
'''Essays''' | |||
*''Winter Notes on Summer Impressions'' (1863) | * '']'' (1863) | ||
*'']'' ( |
* '']'' (1873–1881) | ||
*''Letters'' (collected in English translations in five volumes of ''Complete Letters'') | |||
==== Translations ==== | |||
* (1843) '']'' |
* (1843) '']'' (]) | ||
* (1843) ''La dernière Aldini'' (]) | * (1843) ''La dernière Aldini'' (]) | ||
* (1843) '']'' (]) | * (1843) '']'' (]) | ||
* (1843) '']'' (]) | |||
== |
==== Personal letters ==== | ||
* (1912) ''Letters of Fyodor Michailovitch Dostoevsky to His Family and Friends'' by Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoevsky (Author), translator Ethel Colburn Mayne Kessinger Publishing, LLC (26 May 2006) {{ISBN|978-1-4286-1333-1}} | |||
==== Posthumously published notebooks ==== | |||
* ] | |||
* (1922) ''Stavrogin's Confession & the Plan of the Life of a Great Sinner'' – English translation by ] and ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
== |
==See also== | ||
* ] | |||
:1.{{note|a}} His name has been variously transcribed in English, his first name sometimes being rendered as Theodore or Fedor. Before the post-revolutionary ] which, amongst other things, replaced the Cyrillic letter Ѳ ('th') with the Cyrillic letter Ф ('f'), Dostoyevsky's name was written Ѳеодоръ (Theodor) Михайловичъ Достоевскій. | |||
:2.{{note|b}} ] 30 October 1821 – 28 January 1881 | |||
:3.{{note|c}} The brother of Eduard Totleben, from whom Dostoyevsky would later appeal for his release from the military after prison.{{sfn|Lantz|2004|p=3}} | |||
:4.{{note|d}} The actual reason, which they kept secret from him, was that the periodical had already arranged to publish ]'s '']''. | |||
:5.{{note|e}} ] supported the technical university which provided the opportunity for a good professional military career. | |||
:6.{{note|f}} Lyubov later called herself Aimée (French for "beloved"). | |||
:7.{{note|g}}''Time'' magazine was a popular periodical, with more than 4,000 subscribers before it was closed on 24 May 1863, by the Tsarist Regime due to its publication of an essay by ] about the ]. ''Time'' and its 1864 successor '']'' expressed the philosophy of the conservative and ] movement '']'', which was supported by Dostoyevsky during his term of imprisonment and in his post-prison years.{{sfn|Frank|1988|pp=34–64}} | |||
== References == | == References == | ||
=== Notes === | |||
{{notelist}} | |||
=== Citations === | |||
{{reflist|3}} | |||
{{Reflist|20em}} | |||
== Bibliography == | === Bibliography === | ||
{{refbegin|30em}} | |||
* {{cite book|last=Bloshteyn|first=Maria R.|title=The Making of a Counter-Culture Icon: Henry Miller's Dostoevsky|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=9NvAaLyYoCwC|year=2007|publisher=University of Toronto Press|isbn=978-0-8020-9228-1|ref=harv}} | |||
* {{cite book|last= |
* {{cite book|last=Bercken|first=Wil van den|title=Christian Fiction and Religious Realism in the Novels of Dostoevsky|url={{google books|plainurl=y|id=mFFFtwjQnigC}}|date=2011|publisher=Anthem Press|isbn=978-0-85728-976-6}} | ||
* {{cite book|last= |
* {{cite book|last=Bloshteyn|first=Maria R.|title=The Making of a Counter-Culture Icon: Henry Miller's Dostoevsky|url={{google books|plainurl=y|id=9NvAaLyYoCwC}}|date=2007|publisher=University of Toronto Press|isbn=978-0-8020-9228-1}} | ||
* {{cite book|last= |
* {{cite book|last=Breger|first=Louis|author-link=Louis Breger|title=Dostoevsky: The Author As Psychoanalyst|url={{google books|plainurl=y|id=vxX2JGsN7PoC}}|date=2008|publisher=Transaction Publishers|isbn=978-1-4128-0843-9}} | ||
* {{cite book| |
* {{cite book|last=Burry|first=Alexander|title=Multi-Mediated Dostoevsky: Transposing Novels Into Opera, Film, and Drama|url={{google books|plainurl=y|id=lfLnzvLaB-kC}}|date=2011|publisher=Northwestern University Press|isbn=978-0-8101-2715-9}} | ||
* {{cite book|last= |
* {{cite book|last= Cassedy |first= Steven|url={{google books|plainurl=y|id=DI4FUgZJ1kkC}}|title= Dostoevsky's Religion|date= 2005 |publisher= Stanford University Press |isbn= 978-0-8047-5137-7 }} | ||
* {{cite book|last= |
* {{cite book|last=Cicovacki|first=Predrag|title=Dostoevsky and the Affirmation of Life|url={{google books|plainurl=y|id=6wUX-eI738MC}}|publisher=Transaction Publishers|date=2012|isbn=978-1-4128-4606-6}} | ||
* {{cite book|last= |
* {{cite book |last=Goldstein |first=David |date=1981 |others=Foreword by ] |title=Dostoevsky and the Jews |publisher=University of Texas Press |isbn=978-0-292-71528-8 }} | ||
* {{cite book|last= |
* {{cite book |last=Hingley |first=Ronald |date=1978 |title=Dostoyevsky His Life and Work |location=London |publisher=Paul Elek Limited |isbn=0-236-40121-1 }} | ||
* {{cite book|last= |
* {{cite book|last=Jones|first=Malcolm V.|title=Dostoevsky And the Dynamics of Religious Experience|url={{google books|plainurl=y|id=L52TNlWprfcC}}|date=2005|publisher=Anthem Press|isbn=978-1-84331-205-5}} | ||
* {{cite book|last1=Jones|first1=Malcolm V.|last2=Terry|first2=Garth M.|title=New Essays on Dostoyevsky|url={{google books|plainurl=y|id=UH_VyT6nscwC}}|date=2010|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=978-0-521-15531-1}} | |||
* {{cite book|last=Müller|first=Ludolf|title=Dostojewskij: Sein Leben, Sein Werk, Sein Vermächtnis|year=1982|language=German|publisher=Erich Wewel Verlag|location=Munich|ref=harv}} | |||
* {{cite book|last=Lantz|first=Kenneth A.|title=The Dostoevsky Encyclopedia|url={{google books|plainurl=y|id=XfDOcmJisn0C}}|date=2004|publisher=Greenwood Publishing Group|isbn=978-0-313-30384-5}} | |||
* {{cite book|last=Sekirin|first=Peter|title=The Dostoevsky Archive: Firsthand Accounts of the Novelist from Contemporaries' Memoirs and Rare Periodicals, Most Translated Into English for the First Time, with a Detailed Lifetime Chronology and Annotated Bibliography|url=http://books.google.com/?id=EExUdTF7iLYC|publisher=McFarland|year=1997|isbn=9780786402649|ref=harv}} | |||
* {{cite book|last= |
* {{cite book|last=Lauer|first=Reinhard|title=Geschichte der Russischen Literatur: von 1700 bis zur Gegenwart|url={{google books|plainurl=y|id=VEx1OAAACAAJ}}|date=2000|publisher=Verlag C.H. Beck|language=de|isbn=978-3-406-50267-5}} | ||
* {{cite book|last=Lavrin|first=Janko|author-link=Janko Lavrin|title=Dostoevsky: A Study|url={{google books|plainurl=y|id=57iTq6YSJbcC}}|date=2005|publisher=Kessinger Publishing|isbn=978-1-4179-8844-0}} | |||
* {{cite book|last=Leatherbarrow|first=William J|title=The Cambridge Companion to Dostoevskii|url={{google books|plainurl=y|id=4Lf0xf3a6s4C}}|date=2002|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=978-0-521-65473-9}} | |||
* {{cite book|last=Maurina|first=Zenta|author-link=Zenta Maurina|title=A Prophet of the Soul: Fyodor Dostoievsky|translator=C. P. Finlayson|date=1940|publisher=James Clarke & Co. Ltd}} | |||
* {{cite book|last=Meier-Gräfe|first=Julius|author-link=Julius Meier-Graefe|title=Dostojewski der Dichter|date=1988|orig-date=1926|language=de|publisher=Insel Verlag|isbn=978-3-458-32799-8}} | |||
* {{cite book|last=Mochulsky|first=Konstantin|others=Minihan, Michael A. (translator)|title=Dostoevsky: His Life and Work|url={{google books|plainurl=y|id=mDKphT8_XLsC}}|date=1967|orig-date=1967|publisher=]|isbn=978-0-691-01299-5}} | |||
* {{cite book|last=Müller|first=Ludolf|title=Dostojewskij: Sein Leben, Sein Werk, Sein Vermächtnis|date=1982|language=de|publisher=Erich Wewel Verlag|isbn=978-3-87904-100-8}} | |||
* {{cite book|last=Paperno|first=Irina|title=Suicide as a Cultural Institution in Dostoevsky's Russia|url={{google books|plainurl=y|id=m3pqf8f-6bMC}}|date=1997|publisher=Cornell University Press|isbn=978-0-8014-8425-4}} | |||
* {{cite book|last1=Pattison|first1=George|author-link1=George Pattison|last2=Thompson|first2=Diane Oenning|url={{google books|plainurl=y|id=GlLm4gbPZdQC}}|title=Dostoevsky and the Christian tradition|date=2001|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=978-0-521-78278-4}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Popović |first=Justin |author-link=Justin Popović |date=2007 |publisher=Издатель Д.В. Харченко |script-title=ru:Философия и религия Достоевского |language=ru |trans-title=Philosophical and Religious Beliefs of Dostoyevsky |isbn=978-985-90125-1-8}} | |||
* {{cite book|last= Scanlan|first=James Patrick|title=Dostoevsky the Thinker: A Philosophical Study|url={{google books|plainurl=y|id=lbMYxaFTMZAC}}|date=2002|publisher=Cornell University Press|isbn=978-0-8014-3994-0}} | |||
* {{cite book|editor-last=Sekirin|editor-first=Peter|title=The Dostoevsky Archive: Firsthand Accounts of the Novelist from Contemporaries' Memoirs and Rare Periodicals, Most Translated Into English for the First Time, with a Detailed Lifetime Chronology and Annotated Bibliography|url={{google books|plainurl=y|id=EExUdTF7iLYC}}|publisher=McFarland|date=1997|isbn=978-0-7864-0264-9}} | |||
* {{cite book|last=Terras|first=Victor|title=Reading Dostoevsky|url={{google books|plainurl=y|id=4nV9o8k9y34C}}|date=1998|publisher=University of Wisconsin Press|isbn=978-0-299-16054-8}} | |||
; |
;Biographies | ||
* {{cite book|last=Bloom|first=Harold|title=Fyodor Dostoevsky|url= |
* {{cite book|last=Bloom|first=Harold|author-link=Harold Bloom|title=Fyodor Dostoevsky|url={{google books|plainurl=y|id=1C1K-BnFGFIC}}|date=2004|publisher=Infobase Publishing|isbn=978-0-7910-8117-4}} | ||
* {{cite book|last=Frank|first=Joseph|title=Dostoevsky: A Writer in His Time|url= |
* {{cite book |last=Frank |first=Joseph |author-link=Joseph Frank (writer) |date=2010 |title=Dostoevsky: A Writer in His Time |publisher=Princeton University Press |isbn=9780691128191 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=lp1RpM8o9BQC }} | ||
* {{cite book |
* {{cite book |last=Frank |first=Joseph |date=2003 |orig-date=2002 |title=Dostoevsky: The Mantle of the Prophet, 1871–1881 |publisher=Princeton University Press |isbn=978-0-691-11569-6 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=mQqonU-pweEC }} | ||
* {{cite book |
* {{cite book |last=Frank |first=Joseph |date=1997 |orig-date=1995 |title=Dostoevsky: The Miraculous Years, 1865–1871 |publisher=Princeton University Press |isbn=978-0-691-01587-3 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=iAs4Lz5yog0C }} | ||
* {{cite book|title=Dostoevsky: The Stir of Liberation, 1860–1865 |
* {{cite book |last=Frank |first=Joseph |date=1988 |orig-date=1986 |title=Dostoevsky: The Stir of Liberation, 1860–1865 |publisher=Princeton University Press |isbn=978-0-691-01452-4 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QJj6qb6Rh3AC }} | ||
* {{cite book |
* {{cite book |last=Frank |first=Joseph |date=1987 |orig-date=1983 |title=Dostoevsky: The Years of Ordeal, 1850–1859 |publisher=Princeton University Press |isbn=978-0-691-01422-7 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=K98hhw0IEHgC }} | ||
* {{cite book |
* {{cite book |last=Frank |first=Joseph |date=1979 |orig-date=1976 |title=Dostoevsky: The Seeds of Revolt, 1821–1849 |publisher=] |isbn=978-0-691-01355-8 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=pDEAXltygUIC }} | ||
* {{cite book|last= |
* {{cite book|last=Kjetsaa|first=Geir|author-link=Geir Kjetsaa|title=Fyodor Dostoyevsky: A Writer's Life|date=1989|publisher=Fawcett Columbine|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2lzWAAAAMAAJ|isbn=978-0-449-90334-6}} | ||
* {{cite book|last= |
* {{cite book|last=Lavrin|first=Janko|title=Dostoevsky|date=1947|publisher=New York The Macmillan Company|oclc=646160256}} | ||
{{refend}} | |||
* {{cite book|last=Lavrin|first=Janko|title=Dostoevksy|year=1947|publisher=New York The Macmillan Company|location=New York|oclc=646160256|ref=harv}} | |||
== Further reading == | |||
; Religion | |||
{{refbegin|40em}} | |||
* {{cite book|last=Bercken|first=Wil van den|title=Christian Fiction and Religious Realism in the Novels of Dostoevsky|url=http://books.google.com/?id=mFFFtwjQnigC|year=2011|publisher=Anthem Press|isbn=978-0-85728-976-6|ref=harv}} | |||
* Allen, James Sloan (2008), "Condemned to Be Free," ''Worldly Wisdom: Great Books and the Meanings of Life,'' Savannah: Frederic C. Beil. {{ISBN|978-1-929490-35-6}} | |||
* {{cite book|last=Jones|first=Malcolm V.|title=Dostoevsky And the Dynamics of Religious Experience|url=http://books.google.com/?id=L52TNlWprfcC|year=2005|publisher=Anthem Press|isbn=978-1-84331-205-5|ref=harv}} | |||
*Birmingham, Kevin. 2021. ''The sinner and the saint: Dostoevsky and the gentleman murderer who inspired a masterpiece.'' New York: Penguin. | |||
* {{cite book|last= Cassedy |first= Steven|url=http://books.google.com/?id=DI4FUgZJ1kkC|title= Dostoevsky's Religion|year= 2005 |publisher= Stanford University Press |isbn= 0-8047-5137-4 |ref=harv}} | |||
* ] (1948). , The Macmillan Company. | |||
* {{cite book|last1=Pattison|first1=George|last2=Thompson|first2=Diane Oenning|url=http://books.google.com/?id=GlLm4gbPZdQC|title=Dostoevsky and the Christian tradition|year=2001|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=978-0-5217-8278-4|ref=harv}} | |||
* ] (1910–1911). ''The Hibbert Journal'', Vol. IX. | |||
* Hubben, William. (1997). ''Dostoevsky, Kierkegaard, Nietzsche, and Kafka: Four Prophets of Our Destiny,'' Simon & Schuster. Originally published in 1952. | |||
* Lavrin, Janko (1918). , , , , , , , , , ''The New Age'', Vol. XXII, Nos. 12–21. | |||
* Lavrin, Janko (1918). ''The New Age'', Vol. XXII, No. 24, pp. 465–66. | |||
* Maeztu, Ramiro de (1918). ''The New Age'', Vol. XXII, No. 23, 1918, pp. 449–51. | |||
* Manning, Clarence Augustus (1922). ''The Sewanee Review'', Vol. 30, No. 3. | |||
* {{Cite EB1911|wstitle= Dostoievsky, Feodor Mikhailovich |volume= 8 |last= Seccombe |first= Thomas |author-link= Thomas Seccombe | pages = 438–439 }} | |||
* Simmons, Ernest J. (1940). , Vintage Books. | |||
* Westbrook, Perry D. (1961). . New York: Thomas Yoseloff. | |||
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'''Digital collections''' | |||
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* {{StandardEbooks|Standard Ebooks URL=https://standardebooks.org/ebooks/fyodor-dostoevsky}} | |||
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* {{Gutenberg author |id=314| name=Fyodor Dostoyevsky}} | |||
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* {{Internet Archive author |search=( (Fyodor OR F.) AND (Dostoyevsky OR Dostoevsky) )}} | |||
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* {{ |
* {{Librivox author |id=439}} | ||
* at One More Library | |||
* {{worldcat id|id=lccn-n79-29930}} | |||
* {{in lang|ru}} – the ] bibliography in its original language | |||
'''Scholarly works''' | |||
* – a network of scholars dedicated to studying the life and works of Fyodor Dostoevsky | |||
* {{ISSN|1013-2309}}, a journal published from 1980 to 1988 | |||
'''Other links''' | |||
* {{IBList |type=author|id=96|name=Fyodor Dostoevsky}} | * {{IBList |type=author|id=96|name=Fyodor Dostoevsky}} | ||
* {{cite book |last=Dostoevsky |first=Fyodor |title=A Novel in Nine Letters |translator-first=Constance Clara |translator-last=Garnett |url=http://www.shortstoryproject.com/a-novel-in-nine-letters/|date=8 June 2016 }} Also available in the {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180415190345/https://www.shortstoryproject.com/untranslate/%d1%80%d0%be%d0%bc%d0%b0%d0%bd-%d0%b2-%d0%b4%d0%b5%d0%b2%d1%8f%d1%82%d0%b8-%d0%bf%d0%b8%d1%81%d1%8c%d0%bc%d0%b0%d1%85/ |date=15 April 2018 }}. | |||
* {{IMDb name|id=0234502|name=Fyodor Dostoevsky}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Dostoevsky |first=Fyodor |title=The Dream of a Ridiculous Man |translator-first=Constance |translator-last=Garnett |url=https://www.shortstoryproject.com/dream-ridiculous-man/ |date=4 March 2017 |access-date=15 April 2018 |archive-date=15 April 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180415193437/https://www.shortstoryproject.com/dream-ridiculous-man/ |url-status=dead }} | |||
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{{Fyodor |
{{Fyodor Dostoevsky|state=expanded}} | ||
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|title = Associated subjects | |||
|list1= | |||
{{The Idiot}} | |||
{{Crime and Punishment}} | |||
{{The Brothers Karamazov}} | |||
{{The Gambler}} | |||
{{Demons}} | |||
{{White Nights}} | |||
{{A Gentle Creature}} | |||
{{Existentialism}} | |||
}} | |||
{{Authority control |
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Dostoevsky, Fyodor}} | |||
{{Persondata | |||
| NAME = Dostoyevsky, Fyodor Mikhailovich | |||
| ALTERNATIVE NAMES = Dostoevsky, Fyodor Mikhailovich; Фёдор Миха́йлович Достое́вский (Russian) | |||
| SHORT DESCRIPTION = Russian novelist | |||
| DATE OF BIRTH = 11 November 1821 | |||
| PLACE OF BIRTH = Moscow | |||
| DATE OF DEATH = 9 February 1881 | |||
| PLACE OF DEATH = Saint Petersburg | |||
}} | |||
{{DEFAULTSORT:Dostoyevsky, Fyodor}} | |||
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Latest revision as of 01:37, 15 January 2025
Russian novelist (1821–1881) "Dostoevsky" redirects here. For the surname, see Dostoevsky (surname). In this name that follows Eastern Slavic naming customs, the patronymic is Mikhailovich and the family name is Dostoevsky.
Fyodor Dostoevsky | |
---|---|
Portrait by Vasily Perov, c. 1872 | |
Native name | Фёдор Михайлович Достоевский |
Born | Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoevsky (1821-11-11)11 November 1821 Moscow, Russian Empire |
Died | 9 February 1881(1881-02-09) (aged 59) Saint Petersburg, Russian Empire |
Resting place | Tikhvin Cemetery, Saint Petersburg |
Occupation |
|
Education | Nikolayev Military Engineering Institute |
Period | Modern (19th century) |
Genres | |
Subjects | List |
Literary movement | Realism, naturalism |
Years active | 1844–1880 |
Notable works |
|
Spouse |
|
Children | 4, including Lyubov Dostoevskaya |
Signature | |
Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoevsky (11 November [O.S. 30 October] 1821 – 9 February [O.S. 28 January] 1881), was a Russian novelist, short story writer, essayist and journalist. Numerous literary critics regard him as one of the greatest novelists in all of world literature, as many of his works are considered highly influential masterpieces. Dostoevsky's literary works explore the human condition in the troubled political, social, and spiritual atmospheres of 19th-century Russia, and engage with a variety of philosophical and religious themes. His most acclaimed novels include Crime and Punishment (1866), The Idiot (1869), Demons (1872), The Adolescent (1875), and The Brothers Karamazov (1880). His 1864 novella Notes from Underground is considered to be one of the first works of existentialist literature.
Born in Moscow in 1821, Dostoevsky was introduced to literature at an early age through fairy tales and legends, and through books by Russian and foreign authors. His mother died in 1837 when he was 15, and around the same time, he left school to enter the Nikolayev Military Engineering Institute. After graduating, he worked as an engineer and briefly enjoyed a lavish lifestyle, translating books to earn extra money. In the mid-1840s he wrote his first novel, Poor Folk, which gained him entry into Saint Petersburg's literary circles. However, he was arrested in 1849 for belonging to a literary group, the Petrashevsky Circle, that discussed banned books critical of Tsarist Russia. Dostoevsky was sentenced to death but the sentence was commuted at the last moment. He spent four years in a Siberian prison camp, followed by six years of compulsory military service in exile. In the following years, Dostoevsky worked as a journalist, publishing and editing several magazines of his own and later A Writer's Diary, a collection of his writings. He began to travel around western Europe and developed a gambling addiction, which led to financial hardship. For a time, he had to beg for money, but he eventually became one of the most widely read and highly regarded Russian writers.
Dostoevsky's body of work consists of thirteen novels, three novellas, seventeen short stories, and numerous other works. His writings were widely read both within and beyond his native Russia and influenced an equally great number of later writers including Russians such as Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn and Anton Chekhov, philosophers Friedrich Nietzsche, Albert Camus, and Jean-Paul Sartre, and the emergence of Existentialism and Freudianism. His books have been translated into more than 170 languages, and served as the inspiration for many films.
Ancestry
ParentsMaria Fyodorovna DostoevskayaMikhail Andreyevich DostoevskyDostoevsky's paternal ancestors were part of a Russian noble family of Russian Orthodox Christians. The family traced its roots back to Danilo Irtishch, who was granted lands in the Pinsk region (for centuries part of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, now in modern-day Belarus) in 1509 for his services under a local prince, his progeny then taking the name "Dostoevsky" based on a village there called Dostojewo [pl] (derived from Old Polish dostojnik – dignitary).
Dostoevsky's immediate ancestors on his mother's side were merchants; the male line on his father's side were priests.
In 1809, the 20-year-old Mikhail Dostoevsky enrolled in Moscow's Imperial Medical-Surgical Academy. From there he was assigned to a Moscow hospital, where he served as military doctor, and in 1818 he was appointed a senior physician. In 1819 he married Maria Nechayeva. The following year, he took up a post at the Mariinsky Hospital for the poor. In 1828, when his two sons, Mikhail and Fyodor, were eight and seven respectively, he was promoted to collegiate assessor, a position which raised his legal status to that of the nobility and enabled him to acquire a small estate in Darovoye, a town about 150 km (100 miles) from Moscow, where the family usually spent the summers. Dostoevsky's parents subsequently had six more children: Varvara (1822–1892), Andrei (1825–1897), Lyubov (born and died 1829), Vera (1829–1896), Nikolai (1831–1883) and Aleksandra (1835–1889).
Childhood (1821–1836)
Fyodor Dostoevsky, born on 11 November [O.S. 30 October] 1821 in Moscow, was the second child of Dr. Mikhail Dostoevsky and Maria Dostoevskaya (born Nechayeva). He was raised in the family home in the grounds of the Mariinsky Hospital for the Poor, which was in a lower class district on the edges of Moscow. Dostoevsky encountered the patients, who were at the lower end of the Russian social scale, when playing in the hospital gardens.
Dostoevsky was introduced to literature at an early age. From the age of three, he had read heroic sagas, fairy tales and legends by his nanny, Alena Frolovna, an especially influential figure in his upbringing and his love for fictional stories. When he was four, his mother used the Bible to teach him to read and write. His parents introduced him to a wide range of literature, including Russian writers Karamzin, Pushkin and Derzhavin; Gothic fiction such as the works from writer Ann Radcliffe; romantic works by Schiller and Goethe; heroic tales by Miguel de Cervantes and Walter Scott; and Homer's epics. Dostoevsky was greatly influenced by the work of Nikolai Gogol. Although his father's approach to education has been described as strict and harsh, Dostoevsky himself reported that his imagination was brought alive by nightly readings by his parents.
Some of his childhood experiences found their way into his writings. When a nine-year-old girl had been raped by a drunk, he was asked to fetch his father to attend to her. The incident haunted him, and the theme of the desire of a mature man for a young girl appears in The Devils, The Brothers Karamazov, Crime and Punishment, and other writings. An incident involving a family servant, or serf, in the estate in Darovoye, is described in "The Peasant Marey": when the young Dostoevsky imagines hearing a wolf in the forest, Marey, who is working nearby, comforts him.
Although Dostoevsky had a delicate physical constitution, his parents described him as hot-headed, stubborn, and cheeky. In 1833, Dostoevsky's father, who was profoundly religious, sent him to a French boarding school and then to the Chermak boarding school. He was described as a pale, introverted dreamer and an over-excitable romantic. To pay the school fees, his father borrowed money and extended his private medical practice. Dostoevsky felt out of place among his aristocratic classmates at the Moscow school, and the experience was later reflected in some of his works, notably The Adolescent.
Youth (1836–1843)
On 27 February 1837, Dostoevsky's mother died of tuberculosis. The previous May, his parents had sent Dostoevsky and his brother Mikhail to Saint Petersburg to attend the free Nikolayev Military Engineering Institute, forcing the brothers to abandon their academic studies for military careers. Dostoevsky entered the academy in January 1838, but only with the help of family members. Mikhail was refused admission on health grounds and was sent to an academy in Reval (now Tallinn, Estonia).
Dostoevsky disliked the academy, primarily because of his lack of interest in science, mathematics, and military engineering and his preference for drawing and architecture. As his friend Konstantin Trutovsky once said, "There was no student in the entire institution with less of a military bearing than F.M. Dostoevsky. He moved clumsily and jerkily; his uniform hung awkwardly on him; and his knapsack, shako and rifle all looked like some sort of fetter he had been forced to wear for a time and which lay heavily on him." Dostoevsky's character and interests made him an outsider among his 120 classmates: he showed bravery and a strong sense of justice, protected newcomers, aligned himself with teachers, criticised corruption among officers, and helped poor farmers. Although he was solitary and inhabited his own literary world, he was respected by his classmates. His reclusiveness and interest in religion earned him the nickname "Monk Photius".
Signs of Dostoevsky's epilepsy may have first appeared on learning of the death of his father on 16 June 1839, although the reports of a seizure originated from accounts written by his daughter (later expanded by Sigmund Freud) which are now considered to be unreliable. His father's official cause of death was an apoplectic stroke, but a neighbour, Pavel Khotiaintsev, accused the father's serfs of murder. Had the serfs been found guilty and sent to Siberia, Khotiaintsev would have been in a position to buy the vacated land. The serfs were acquitted in a trial in Tula, but Dostoevsky's brother Mikhail perpetuated the story. After his father's death, Dostoevsky continued his studies, passed his exams and obtained the rank of engineer cadet, entitling him to live away from the academy. He visited Mikhail in Reval (Tallinn) and frequently attended concerts, operas, plays and ballets. During this time, two of his friends introduced him to gambling.
On 12 August 1843 Dostoevsky took a job as a lieutenant engineer and lived with Adolph Totleben in an apartment owned by Dr. Rizenkampf, a friend of Mikhail. Rizenkampf characterised him as "no less good-natured and no less courteous than his brother, but when not in a good mood he often looked at everything through dark glasses, became vexed, forgot good manners, and sometimes was carried away to the point of abusiveness and loss of self-awareness". Dostoevsky's first completed literary work, a translation of Honoré de Balzac's novel Eugénie Grandet, was published in June and July 1843 in the 6th and 7th volumes of the journal Repertoire and Pantheon, followed by several other translations. None were successful, and his financial difficulties led him to write a novel.
Career
Early career (1844–1849)
Dostoevsky completed his first novel, Poor Folk, in May 1845. His friend Dmitry Grigorovich, with whom he was sharing an apartment at the time, took the manuscript to the poet Nikolay Nekrasov, who in turn showed it to the influential literary critic Vissarion Belinsky. Belinsky described it as Russia's first "social novel". Poor Folk was released on 15 January 1846 in the St Petersburg Collection almanac and became a commercial success.
Dostoevsky felt that his military career would endanger his now flourishing literary career, so he wrote a letter asking to resign his post. Shortly thereafter, he wrote his second novel, The Double, which appeared in the journal Notes of the Fatherland on 30 January 1846, before being published in February. Around the same time, Dostoevsky discovered socialism through the writings of French thinkers Fourier, Cabet, Proudhon and Saint-Simon. Through his relationship with Belinsky he expanded his knowledge of the philosophy of socialism. He was attracted to its logic, its sense of justice and its preoccupation with the destitute and the disadvantaged. However, his Russian Orthodox faith and religious sensibilities could not accord with Belinsky's admixture of atheism, utilitarianism and scientific materialism, leading to increasing friction between them. Dostoevsky eventually parted with him and his associates.
After The Double received negative reviews (including a particularly scathing one from Belinsky) Dostoevsky's health declined and his seizures became more frequent, but he continued writing. From 1846 to 1848 he published several short stories in the magazine Notes of the Fatherland, including "Mr. Prokharchin", "The Landlady", "A Weak Heart", and "White Nights". The negative reception of these stories, combined with his health problems and Belinsky's attacks, caused him distress and financial difficulty, but this was greatly alleviated when he joined the utopian socialist Beketov circle, a tightly knit community which helped him to survive. When the circle dissolved, Dostoevsky befriended Apollon Maykov and his brother Valerian. In 1846, on the recommendation of the poet Aleksey Pleshcheyev, he joined the Petrashevsky Circle, founded by Mikhail Petrashevsky, who had proposed social reforms in Russia. Mikhail Bakunin once wrote to Alexander Herzen that the group was "the most innocent and harmless company" and its members were "systematic opponents of all revolutionary goals and means". Dostoevsky used the circle's library on Saturdays and Sundays and occasionally participated in their discussions on freedom from censorship and the abolition of serfdom. Bakunin's description, however, was not true of the aristocrat Nikolay Speshnev, who joined the circle in 1848 and set about creating a secret revolutionary society from amongst its members. Dostoevsky himself became a member of this society, was aware of its conspiratorial aims, and actively participated, although he harboured significant doubts about their actions and intentions.
In 1849, the first parts of Netochka Nezvanova, a novel Dostoevsky had been planning since 1846, were published in Notes of the Fatherland, but his banishment ended the project leaving only what was supposed to be the prologue of the novel. Dostoevsky never attempted to complete it leaving only a sketch of the novel behind.
Siberian exile (1849–1854)
The members of the Petrashevsky Circle were denounced to Liprandi, an official at the Ministry of Internal Affairs. Dostoevsky was accused of reading works by Belinsky, including the banned Letter to Gogol, and of circulating copies of these and other works. Antonelli, the government agent who had reported the group, wrote in his statement that at least one of the papers criticised Russian politics and religion. Dostoevsky responded to these charges by declaring that he had read the essays only "as a literary monument, neither more nor less"; he spoke of "personality and human egoism" rather than of politics. Even so, he and his fellow "conspirators" were arrested on 23 April 1849 at the request of Count A. Orlov and Tsar Nicholas I, who feared a revolution like the Decembrist revolt of 1825 in Russia and the Revolutions of 1848 in Europe. The members were held in the well-defended Peter and Paul Fortress, which housed the most dangerous convicts.
The case was discussed for four months by an investigative commission headed by the Tsar, with Adjutant General Ivan Nabokov, senator Prince Pavel Gagarin, Prince Vasili Dolgorukov, General Yakov Rostovtsev and General Leonty Dubelt, head of the secret police. They sentenced the members of the circle to death by firing squad, and the prisoners were taken to Semyonov Place in Saint Petersburg on 23 December 1849. They were split into three-man groups and the first group was taken in front of the firing squad. Dostoevsky was the third in the second row; next to him stood Pleshcheyev and Durov. The execution was stayed when a cart delivered a letter from the Tsar commuting the sentence. Dostoevsky later described the experience of what he believed to be the last moments of his life in his novel The Idiot. The story of a young man sentenced to death by firing squad but reprieved at the last moment is recounted by the main character, Prince Myshkin, who describes the experience from the point of view of the victim, and considers the philosophical and spiritual implications.
Dostoevsky served four years of exile with hard labour at a katorga prison camp in Omsk, Siberia, followed by a term of compulsory military service. After a fourteen-day sleigh ride, the prisoners reached Tobolsk, a prisoner way station. Despite the circumstances, Dostoevsky consoled the other prisoners, such as the Petrashevist Ivan Yastrzhembsky, who was surprised by Dostoevsky's kindness and eventually abandoned his decision to kill himself. In Tobolsk, the members received food and clothes from the Decembrist women, as well as several copies of the New Testament with a ten-ruble banknote inside each copy. Eleven days later, Dostoevsky reached Omsk together with just one other member of the Petrashevsky Circle, the writer Sergei Durov. Dostoevsky described his barracks:
In summer, intolerable closeness; in winter, unendurable cold. All the floors were rotten. Filth on the floors an inch thick; one could slip and fall ... We were packed like herrings in a barrel ... There was no room to turn around. From dusk to dawn it was impossible not to behave like pigs ... Fleas, lice, and black beetles by the bushel ...
Classified as "one of the most dangerous convicts", Dostoevsky had his hands and feet shackled until his release. He was only permitted to read his New Testament Bible. In addition to his seizures, he had haemorrhoids, lost weight and was "burned by some fever, trembling and feeling too hot or too cold every night". The smell of the privy pervaded the entire building, and the small bathroom had to suffice for more than 200 people. Dostoevsky was occasionally sent to the military hospital, where he read newspapers and Dickens novels. He was respected by most of the other prisoners, but despised by some Polish political prisoners because of his Russian nationalism and anti-Polish sentiments.
Release from prison and first marriage (1854–1866)
After his release on 14 February 1854, Dostoevsky asked Mikhail to help him financially and to send him books by Vico, Guizot, Ranke, Hegel and Kant. The House of the Dead, based on his experience in prison, was published in 1861 in the journal Vremya ("Time") – it was the first published novel about Russian prisons. Before moving in mid-March to Semipalatinsk, where he was forced to serve in the Siberian Army Corps of the Seventh Line Battalion, Dostoevsky met geographer Pyotr Semyonov and ethnographer Shokan Walikhanuli. Around November 1854, he met Baron Alexander Egorovich Wrangel, an admirer of his books, who had attended the aborted execution. They both rented houses in the Cossack Garden outside Semipalatinsk. Wrangel remarked that Dostoevsky "looked morose. His sickly, pale face was covered with freckles, and his blond hair was cut short. He was a little over average height and looked at me intensely with his sharp, grey-blue eyes. It was as if he were trying to look into my soul and discover what kind of man I was."
In Semipalatinsk, Dostoevsky tutored several schoolchildren and came into contact with upper-class families, including that of Lieutenant-Colonel Belikhov, who used to invite him to read passages from newspapers and magazines. During a visit to Belikhov, Dostoevsky met the family of Alexander Ivanovich Isaev and Maria Dmitrievna Isaeva and fell in love with the latter. Alexander Isaev took a new post in Kuznetsk, where he died in August 1855. Maria and her son then moved with Dostoevsky to Barnaul. In 1856, Dostoevsky sent a letter through Wrangel to General Eduard Totleben, apologising for his activity in several utopian circles. As a result, he obtained the right to publish books and to marry, although he remained under police surveillance for the rest of his life. Maria married Dostoevsky in Kuznetsk on 7 February 1857, even though she had initially refused his marriage proposal, stating that they were not meant for each other and that his poor financial situation precluded marriage. Their family life was unhappy and she found it difficult to cope with his seizures. Describing their relationship, he wrote: "Because of her strange, suspicious and fantastic character, we were definitely not happy together, but we could not stop loving each other; and the more unhappy we were, the more attached to each other we became". They mostly lived apart. In 1859 he was released from military service because of deteriorating health and was granted permission to return to European Russia, first to Tver, where he met his brother for the first time in ten years, and then to St Petersburg.
The short story "A Little Hero" (Dostoevsky's only work completed in prison) appeared in a journal, but "Uncle's Dream" and "The Village of Stepanchikovo" were not published until 1860. Notes from the House of the Dead was released in Russky Mir (Russian World) in September 1860. Humiliated and Insulted was published in the new Vremya magazine, which had been created with the help of funds from his brother's cigarette factory.
Dostoevsky travelled to western Europe for the first time on 7 June 1862, visiting Cologne, Berlin, Dresden, Wiesbaden, Belgium, and Paris. In London, he met Herzen and visited the Crystal Palace. He travelled with Nikolay Strakhov through Switzerland and several North Italian cities, including Turin, Livorno, and Florence. He recorded his impressions of those trips in the essay "Winter Notes on Summer Impressions", in which he also criticised capitalism, social modernisation, materialism, Catholicism and Protestantism. Dostoevsky viewed the Crystal Palace as a monument to soulless modern society, the myth of progress, and the worship of empty materialism.
From August to October 1863, Dostoevsky made another trip to western Europe. He met his second love, Polina Suslova, in Paris and lost nearly all his money gambling in Wiesbaden and Baden-Baden. In 1864 his wife Maria and his brother Mikhail died, and Dostoevsky became the lone parent of his stepson Pasha and the sole supporter of his brother's family. The failure of Epoch, the magazine he had founded with Mikhail after the suppression of Vremya, worsened his financial situation, although the continued help of his relatives and friends averted bankruptcy.
Second marriage and honeymoon (1866–1871)
The first two parts of Crime and Punishment were published in January and February 1866 in the periodical The Russian Messenger, attracting at least 500 new subscribers to the magazine.
Dostoevsky returned to Saint Petersburg in mid-September and promised his editor, Fyodor Stellovsky, that he would complete The Gambler, a short novel focused on gambling addiction, by November, although he had not yet begun writing it. One of Dostoevsky's friends, Aleksandr Milyukov, advised him to hire a secretary. Dostoevsky contacted stenographer Pavel Olkhin from Saint Petersburg, who recommended his pupil, the twenty-year-old Anna Grigoryevna Snitkina. Her shorthand helped Dostoevsky to complete The Gambler on 30 October, after 26 days' work. She remarked that Dostoevsky was of average height but always tried to carry himself erect. "He had light brown, slightly reddish hair, he used some hair conditioner, and he combed his hair in a diligent way ... his eyes, they were different: one was dark brown; in the other, the pupil was so big that you could not see its color, . The strangeness of his eyes gave Dostoyevsky some mysterious appearance. His face was pale, and it looked unhealthy."
On 15 February 1867 Dostoevsky married Snitkina in Trinity Cathedral, Saint Petersburg. The 7,000 rubles he had earned from Crime and Punishment did not cover their debts, forcing Anna to sell her valuables. On 14 April 1867, they began a delayed honeymoon in Germany with the money gained from the sale. They stayed in Berlin and visited the Gemäldegalerie Alte Meister in Dresden, where he sought inspiration for his writing. They continued their trip through Germany, visiting Frankfurt, Darmstadt, Heidelberg and Karlsruhe. They spent five weeks in Baden-Baden, where Dostoevsky had a quarrel with Turgenev and again lost much money at the roulette table. At one point, his wife was reportedly forced to pawn her underwear. The couple travelled on to Geneva.
In September 1867, Dostoevsky began work on The Idiot, and after a prolonged planning process that bore little resemblance to the published novel, he eventually managed to write the first 100 pages in only 23 days; the serialisation began in The Russian Messenger in January 1868.
Their first child, Sofya, had been conceived in Baden-Baden, and was born in Geneva on 5 March 1868. The baby died of pneumonia three months later, and Anna recalled how Dostoevsky "wept and sobbed like a woman in despair". Sofya was buried at the Cimetière des Rois (Cemetery of Kings), which is considered the Genevan Panthéon. The grave was later dissolved but in 1986 the International Dostoevsky Society donated a commemorative plaque.
The couple moved from Geneva to Vevey and then to Milan before continuing to Florence. The Idiot was completed there in January 1869, the final part appearing in The Russian Messenger in February 1869. Anna gave birth to their second daughter, Lyubov, on 26 September 1869 in Dresden. In April 1871, Dostoevsky made a final visit to a gambling hall in Wiesbaden. Anna claimed that he stopped gambling after the birth of their second daughter, but this is a subject of debate.
After hearing news that the socialist revolutionary group "People's Vengeance" had murdered one of its own members, Ivan Ivanov, on 21 November 1869, Dostoevsky began writing Demons. In 1871, Dostoevsky and Anna travelled by train to Berlin. During the trip, he burnt several manuscripts, including those of The Idiot, because he was concerned about potential problems with customs. The family arrived in Saint Petersburg on 8 July, marking the end of a honeymoon (originally planned for three months) that had lasted over four years.
Back in Russia (1871–1875)
Back in Russia in July 1871, the family was again in financial trouble and had to sell their remaining possessions. Their son Fyodor was born on 16 July, and they moved to an apartment near the Institute of Technology soon after. They hoped to cancel their large debts by selling their rental house in Peski, but difficulties with the tenant resulted in a relatively low selling price, and disputes with their creditors continued. Anna proposed that they raise money on her husband's copyrights and negotiate with the creditors to pay off their debts in installments.
Dostoevsky revived his friendships with Maykov and Strakhov and made new acquaintances, including church politician Terty Filipov and the brothers Vsevolod and Vladimir Solovyov. Konstantin Pobedonostsev, future Imperial High Commissioner of the Most Holy Synod, influenced Dostoevsky's political progression to conservatism. Around early 1872 the family spent several months in Staraya Russa, a town known for its mineral spa. Dostoevsky's work was delayed when Anna's sister Maria Svatkovskaya died on 1 May 1872, from either typhus or malaria, and Anna developed an abscess on her throat.
The family returned to St Petersburg in September. Demons was finished on 26 November and released in January 1873 by the "Dostoevsky Publishing Company", which was founded by Dostoevsky and his wife. Although they accepted only cash payments and the bookshop was in their own apartment, the business was successful, and they sold around 3,000 copies of Demons. Anna managed the finances. Dostoevsky proposed that they establish a new periodical, which would be called A Writer's Diary and would include a collection of essays, but funds were lacking, and the Diary was published in Vladimir Meshchersky's The Citizen, beginning on 1 January, in return for a salary of 3,000 rubles per year. In the summer of 1873, Anna returned to Staraya Russa with the children, while Dostoevsky stayed in St Petersburg to continue with his Diary.
In March 1874, Dostoevsky left The Citizen because of the stressful work and interference from the Russian bureaucracy. In his fifteen months with The Citizen, he had been taken to court twice: on 11 June 1873 for citing the words of Prince Meshchersky without permission, and again on 23 March 1874. Dostoevsky offered to sell a new novel he had not yet begun to write to The Russian Messenger, but the magazine refused. Nikolay Nekrasov suggested that he publish A Writer's Diary in Notes of the Fatherland; he would receive 250 rubles for each printer's sheet – 100 more than the text's publication in The Russian Messenger would have earned. Dostoevsky accepted. As his health began to decline, he consulted several doctors in St Petersburg and was advised to take a cure outside Russia. Around July, he reached Ems and consulted a physician, who diagnosed him with acute catarrh. During his stay he began The Adolescent. He returned to Saint Petersburg in late July.
Anna proposed that they spend the winter in Staraya Russa to allow Dostoevsky to rest, although doctors had suggested a second visit to Ems because his health had previously improved there. On 10 August 1875 his son Alexey was born in Staraya Russa, and in mid-September the family returned to Saint Petersburg. Dostoevsky finished The Adolescent at the end of 1875, although passages of it had been serialised in Notes of the Fatherland since January. The Adolescent chronicles the life of Arkady Dolgoruky, the illegitimate child of the landowner Versilov and a peasant mother. It deals primarily with the relationship between father and son, which became a frequent theme in Dostoevsky's subsequent works.
Last years (1876–1881)
In early 1876, Dostoevsky continued work on his Diary. The book includes numerous essays and a few short stories about society, religion, politics and ethics. The collection sold more than twice as many copies as his previous books. Dostoevsky received more letters from readers than ever before, and people of all ages and occupations visited him. With assistance from Anna's brother, the family bought a dacha in Staraya Russa. In the summer of 1876, Dostoevsky began experiencing shortness of breath again. He visited Ems for the third time and was told that he might live for another 15 years if he moved to a healthier climate. When he returned to Russia, Tsar Alexander II ordered Dostoevsky to visit his palace to present the Diary to him, and he asked him to educate his sons, Sergey and Paul. This visit further increased Dosteyevsky's circle of acquaintances. He was a frequent guest in several salons in Saint Petersburg and met many famous people, including Countess Sophia Tolstaya, Yakov Polonsky, Sergei Witte, Alexey Suvorin, Anton Rubinstein and Ilya Repin.
Dostoevsky's health declined further, and in March 1877 he had four epileptic seizures. Rather than returning to Ems, he visited Maly Prikol, a manor near Kursk. While returning to St Petersburg to finalise his Diary, he visited Darovoye, where he had spent much of his childhood. In December he attended Nekrasov's funeral and gave a speech. He was appointed an honorary member of the Russian Academy of Sciences, from which he received an honorary certificate in February 1879. He declined an invitation to an international congress on copyright in Paris after his son Alyosha had a severe epileptic seizure and died on 16 May. The family later moved to the apartment where Dostoevsky had written his first works. Around this time, he was elected to the board of directors of the Slavic Benevolent Society in Saint Petersburg. That summer, he was elected to the honorary committee of the Association Littéraire et Artistique Internationale, whose members included Victor Hugo, Ivan Turgenev, Paul Heyse, Alfred Tennyson, Anthony Trollope, Henry Longfellow, Ralph Waldo Emerson and Leo Tolstoy. Dostoevsky made his fourth and final visit to Ems in early August 1879. He was diagnosed with early-stage pulmonary emphysema, which his doctor believed could be successfully managed, but not cured.
On 3 February 1880 Dostoevsky was elected vice-president of the Slavic Benevolent Society, and he was invited to speak at the unveiling of the Pushkin memorial in Moscow. On 8 June he delivered his speech, giving an impressive performance that had a significant emotional impact on his audience. His speech was met with thunderous applause, and even his long-time rival Turgenev embraced him. Konstantin Staniukovich praised the speech in his essay "The Pushkin Anniversary and Dostoevsky's Speech" in The Business, writing that "the language of Dostoevsky's really looks like a sermon. He speaks with the tone of a prophet. He makes a sermon like a pastor; it is very deep, sincere, and we understand that he wants to impress the emotions of his listeners." The speech was criticised later by liberal political scientist Alexander Gradovsky, who thought that Dostoevsky idolised "the people", and by conservative thinker Konstantin Leontiev, who, in his essay "On Universal Love", compared the speech to French utopian socialism. The attacks led to a further deterioration in his health.
Death
On 6 February [O.S. 25 January] 1881, while searching for members of the terrorist organisation Narodnaya Volya ("The People's Will") who would soon assassinate Tsar Alexander II, the Tsar's secret police executed a search warrant in the apartment of one of Dostoevsky's neighbours. On the following day, Dostoevsky suffered a pulmonary haemorrhage. Anna denied that the search had caused it, saying that the haemorrhage had occurred after her husband had been looking for a dropped pen holder. After another haemorrhage, Anna called the doctors, who gave a poor prognosis. A third haemorrhage followed shortly afterwards. While seeing his children before dying, Dostoevsky requested that the parable of the Prodigal Son be read to his children. The profound meaning of this request is pointed out by Joseph Frank:
It was this parable of transgression, repentance, and forgiveness that he wished to leave as a last heritage to his children, and it may well be seen as his own ultimate understanding of the meaning of his life and the message of his work.
Among Dostoevsky's last words was his quotation of Matthew 3:14–15: "But John forbad him, saying, I have a need to be baptised of thee, and comest thou to me? And Jesus answering said unto him, Suffer it to be so now: for thus it becometh us to fulfil all righteousness", and he finished with "Hear now—permit it. Do not restrain me!". His last words to his wife Anna were: "Remember, Anya, I have always loved you passionately and have never been unfaithful to you ever, even in my thoughts!" When he died, his body was placed on a table, following Russian custom. He was interred in the Tikhvin Cemetery at the Alexander Nevsky Convent, near his favourite poets, Nikolay Karamzin and Vasily Zhukovsky. It is unclear how many attended his funeral. According to one reporter, more than 100,000 mourners were present, while others describe attendance between 40,000 and 50,000. His tombstone is inscribed with lines from the New Testament:
Verily, verily, I say unto you, Except a corn of wheat fall into the ground and die, it abideth alone: but if it dies, it bringeth forth much fruit.
— John 12:24
Personal life
Previous Relationships
Before meeting and marrying his future wife in 1867, Dostoevsky had other relationships. Dostoevsky had his first known affair with Avdotya Panaeva, whom he met in Ivan Panaev's circle in the early 1840s. He described her as educated, interested in literature, and a femme fatale. He admitted later that he was uncertain about their relationship. According to Anna Dostoevskaya's memoirs, Dostoevsky once asked his sister's sister-in-law, Yelena Ivanova, whether she would marry him, hoping to replace her mortally ill husband after he died, but she rejected his proposal.
Dostoevsky and Polina Suslova had a short but intimate affair, which peaked in the winter of 1862–1863. Suslova's dalliance with a Spaniard in late spring and Dostoevsky's gambling addiction and age ended their relationship. He later described her in a letter to Nadezhda Suslova as a "great egoist. Her egoism and her vanity are colossal. She demands everything of other people, all the perfections, and does not pardon the slightest imperfection in the light of other qualities that one may possess", and later stated "I still love her, but I do not want to love her any more. She doesn't deserve this love ..." In 1858 Dostoevsky had a romance with comic actress Aleksandra Ivanovna Schubert. Although she divorced Dostoevsky's friend Stepan Yanovsky, she would not live with him. Dostoevsky did not love her either, but they were probably good friends. She wrote that he "became very attracted to me".
Through a worker in Epoch, Dostoevsky learned of the Russian-born Martha Brown (née Elizaveta Andreyevna Chlebnikova), who had had affairs with several westerners. Her relationship with Dostoevsky is known only through letters written between November 1864 and January 1865. In 1865, Dostoevsky met Anna Korvin-Krukovskaya. Their relationship is not verified; Anna Dostoevskaya spoke of a good affair, but Korvin-Krukovskaya's sister, the mathematician Sofia Kovalevskaya, thought that Korvin-Krukovskaya had rejected him.
Political beliefs
In his youth, Dostoevsky enjoyed reading Nikolai Karamzin's History of the Russian State (published 1818–1829), which praised conservatism and Russian independence, ideas that Dostoevsky would embrace later in life. Before his arrest for participating in the Petrashevsky Circle in 1849, Dostoevsky remarked, "As far as I am concerned, nothing was ever more ridiculous than the idea of a republican government in Russia." In an 1881 edition of his Diaries, Dostoevsky stated that the Tsar and the people should form a unity: "For the people, the tsar is not an external power, not the power of some conqueror ... but a power of all the people, an all-unifying power the people themselves desired."
While critical of serfdom, Dostoevsky was skeptical about the creation of a constitution, a concept he viewed as unrelated to Russia's history. He described it as a mere "gentleman's rule" and believed that "a constitution would simply enslave the people". He advocated social change instead, for example removal of the feudal system and a weakening of the divisions between the peasantry and the affluent classes. His ideal was a utopian, Christianized Russia where "if everyone were actively Christian, not a single social question would come up ... If they were Christians they would settle everything". He thought democracy and oligarchy were poor systems; of France he wrote, "the oligarchs are only concerned with the interest of the wealthy; the democrats, only with the interest of the poor; but the interests of society, the interest of all and the future of France as a whole—no one there bothers about these things." He maintained that political parties ultimately led to social discord. In the 1860s, he discovered Pochvennichestvo, a movement similar to Slavophilism in that it rejected Europe's culture and contemporary philosophical movements, such as nihilism and materialism. Pochvennichestvo differed from Slavophilism in aiming to establish, not an isolated Russia, but a more open state modelled on the Russia of Peter the Great.
In his incomplete article "Socialism and Christianity", Dostoevsky claimed that civilisation ("the second stage in human history") had become degraded, and that it was moving towards liberalism and losing its faith in God. He asserted that the traditional concept of Christianity should be recovered. He thought that contemporary western Europe had "rejected the single formula for their salvation that came from God and was proclaimed through revelation, 'Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself', and replaced it with practical conclusions such as, 'Chacun pour soi et Dieu pour tous' , or "scientific" slogans like 'the struggle for survival.'" He considered this crisis to be the consequence of the collision between communal and individual interests, brought about by a decline in religious and moral principles.
Dostoevsky distinguished three "enormous world ideas" prevalent in his time: Roman Catholicism, Protestantism and (Russian) Orthodoxy. He claimed that Catholicism had continued the tradition of Imperial Rome and had thus become anti-Christian and proto-socialist, inasmuch as the Church's interest in political and mundane affairs led it to abandon the idea of Christ. For Dostoevsky, socialism was "the latest incarnation of the Catholic idea" and its "natural ally". He found Protestantism self-contradictory and claimed that it would ultimately lose power and spirituality. He deemed (Russian) Orthodoxy to be the ideal form of Christianity.
For all that, to place Dostoevsky politically is not simple: as a Christian, he rejected atheistic socialism; as a traditionalist, he rejected the destruction of the institutions; and, as a pacifist, he rejected any violent method or upheaval led by either progressives or reactionaries. He supported private property and business rights, and did not agree with many criticisms of the free market from the socialist utopians of his time.
During the Russo-Turkish War of 1877–1878, Dostoevsky asserted that war might be necessary if salvation were to be granted. He wanted the Muslim Ottoman Empire eliminated and the Christian Byzantine Empire restored, and he hoped for the liberation of Balkan Slavs and their unification with the Russian Empire.
Ethnic beliefs
Many characters in Dostoevsky's works, including Jews, have been described as displaying negative stereotypes. In an 1877 letter to Arkady Kovner, a Jew who had accused Dostoevsky of antisemitism, he replied with the following:
"I am not an enemy of the Jews at all and never have been. But as you say, its 40-century existence proves that this tribe has exceptional vitality, which would not help, during the course of its history, taking the form of various Status in Statu ... how can they fail to find themselves, even if only partially, at variance with the indigenous population – the Russian tribe?"
Dostoevsky also was negative towards Poles, depicting them negatively, and harboring negative opinions towards them personally.
Dostoevsky held to a Pan-Slavic ideology that was conditioned by the Ottoman occupations of Eastern Europe. In 1876, the Slavic populations of modern-day South-Eastern Serbia outside of the Principality of Serbia (independent since 1868) and of the region of Bulgaria rose up against their Ottoman overlords, but the rebellion was put down. In the process, an estimated 12,000 people were killed. In his diaries, he scorned Westerners and those who were against the Pan-Slavic movement. This ideology was motivated in part by the desire to promote a common Orthodox Christian heritage, which he saw as both unifying as well as a force for liberation.
Religious beliefs
Dostoevsky was an Orthodox Christian who was raised in a religious family and knew the Gospel from a very young age. He was influenced by the Russian translation of Johannes Hübner's One Hundred and Four Sacred Stories from the Old and New Testaments Selected for Children (partly a German bible for children and partly a catechism). He attended Sunday liturgies from an early age and took part in annual pilgrimages to the St. Sergius Trinity Monastery. A deacon at the hospital gave him religious instruction. Among his most cherished childhood memories were reciting prayers in front of guests and reading passages from the Book of Job that impressed him while "still almost a child."
According to an officer at the military academy, Dostoevsky was profoundly religious, followed Orthodox practice, and regularly read the Gospels and Heinrich Zschokke's Die Stunden der Andacht ("Hours of Devotion"), which "preached a sentimental version of Christianity entirely free from dogmatic content and with a strong emphasis on giving Christian love a social application." This book may have prompted his later interest in Christian socialism. Through the literature of Hoffmann, Balzac, Eugène Sue, and Goethe, Dostoevsky created his own belief system, similar to Russian sectarianism and the Old Belief. After his arrest, aborted execution, and subsequent imprisonment, he focused intensely on the figure of Christ and on the New Testament: the only book allowed in prison. In a January 1854 letter to the woman who had sent him the New Testament, Dostoevsky wrote that he was a "child of unbelief and doubt up to this moment, and I am certain that I shall remain so to the grave." He also wrote that "even if someone were to prove to me that the truth lay outside Christ, I should choose to remain with Christ rather than with the truth."
In Semipalatinsk, Dostoevsky revived his faith by looking frequently at the stars. Wrangel said that he was "rather pious, but did not often go to church, and disliked priests, especially the Siberian ones. But he spoke about Christ ecstatically." Two pilgrimages and two works by Dmitri Rostovsky, an archbishop who influenced Ukrainian and Russian literature by composing groundbreaking religious plays, strengthened his beliefs. Through his visits to western Europe and discussions with Herzen, Grigoriev, and Strakhov, Dostoevsky discovered the Pochvennichestvo movement and the theory that the Catholic Church had adopted the principles of rationalism, legalism, materialism, and individualism from ancient Rome and had passed on its philosophy to Protestantism and consequently to atheistic socialism.
Themes and style
Main article: Themes in Fyodor Dostoevsky's writingsDostoevsky's canon includes novels, novellas, novelettes, short stories, essays, pamphlets, limericks, epigrams and poems. He wrote more than 700 letters, a dozen of which are lost.
Dostoevsky expressed religious, psychological, and philosophical ideas in his writings. His works explore such themes as suicide, poverty, human manipulation, and morality. Psychological themes include dreaming, first seen in "White Nights", and the father-son relationship, beginning in The Adolescent. Most of his works demonstrate a vision of the chaotic sociopolitical structure of contemporary Russia. His early works viewed society (for example, the differences between poor and rich) through the lens of literary realism and naturalism. The influences of other writers, particularly evident in his early works, led to accusations of plagiarism, but his style gradually became more individual. After his release from prison, Dostoevsky incorporated religious themes, especially those of Russian Orthodoxy, into his writing. Elements of gothic fiction, romanticism, and satire are observable in some of his books. He frequently used autobiographical or semi-autobiographical details.
An important stylistic element in Dostoevsky's writing is polyphony, the simultaneous presence of multiple narrative voices and perspectives. Kornelije Kvas wrote that Bakhtin's theory of "the polyphonic novel and Dostoevsky's dialogicness of narration postulates the non-existence of the 'final' word, which is why the thoughts, emotions and experiences of the world of the narrator and his/her characters are reflected through the words of another, with which they can never fully blend."
Legacy
Reception and influence
Dostoevsky is regarded as one of the greatest and most influential novelists of the Golden Age of Russian literature. Leo Tolstoy admired some of Dostoevsky's works, particularly The House of the Dead, which he saw as exalted religious art, inspired by deep faith and love of humanity. Albert Einstein called Dostoevsky a "great religious writer" who explores "the mystery of spiritual existence". Sigmund Freud ranked Dostoevsky second only to Shakespeare as a creative writer, and called The Brothers Karamazov "the most magnificent novel ever written". Friedrich Nietzsche called Dostoevsky "the only psychologist from whom I had something to learn" and described him as being "among the most beautiful strokes of fortune in my life." The Russian literary theorist Mikhail Bakhtin's analysis of Dostoevsky came to be at the foundation of his theory of the novel. Bakhtin argued that Dostoevsky's use of polyphony was a major advancement in the development of the novel as a genre.
In his posthumous collection of sketches A Moveable Feast, Ernest Hemingway stated that in Dostoevsky "there were things believable and not to be believed, but some so true that they changed you as you read them; frailty and madness, wickedness and saintliness, and the insanity of gambling were there to know". James Joyce praised Dostoevsky's prose: "... he is the man more than any other who has created modern prose, and intensified it to its present-day pitch. It was his explosive power which shattered the Victorian novel with its simpering maidens and ordered commonplaces; books which were without imagination or violence." In her essay The Russian Point of View, Virginia Woolf said, "Out of Shakespeare there is no more exciting reading". Franz Kafka called Dostoevsky his "blood-relative" and was heavily influenced by his works, particularly The Brothers Karamazov and Crime and Punishment, both of which profoundly influenced The Trial. Hermann Hesse enjoyed Dostoevsky's work and said that to read him is like a "glimpse into the havoc". The Norwegian novelist Knut Hamsun wrote that "no one has analyzed the complicated human structure as Dostoyevsky. His psychologic sense is overwhelming and visionary." Writers associated with cultural movements such as surrealism, existentialism and the Beats cite Dostoevsky as an influence, and he is regarded as a forerunner to Russian symbolism, expressionism and psychoanalysis.
J. M. Coetzee featured Dostoevsky as the protagonist in his 1997 novel The Master of Petersburg. The famous Malayalam novel Oru Sankeerthanam Pole by Perumbadavam Sreedharan deals with the life of Dostoevsky and his love affair with Anna.
Honours
In 1956 an olive-green postage stamp dedicated to Dostoevsky was released in the Soviet Union, with a print run of 1,000 copies. A Dostoevsky Museum was opened on 12 November 1971 in the apartment where he wrote his first and final novels. A crater on Mercury was named after him in 1979, and a minor planet discovered in 1981 by Lyudmila Karachkina was named 3453 Dostoevsky. Music critic and broadcaster Artemy Troitsky has hosted the radio show "FM Достоевский" (FM Dostoevsky) since 1997. Viewers of the TV show Name of Russia voted him the ninth greatest Russian of all time, just after Dmitry Mendeleev, and just ahead of ruler Ivan IV. An Eagle Award-winning TV series directed by Vladimir Khotinenko about Dostoevsky's life was screened in 2011.
Numerous memorials were inaugurated in cities and regions such as Moscow, Saint Petersburg, Novosibirsk, Omsk, Semipalatinsk, Kusnetsk, Darovoye, Staraya Russa, Lyublino, Tallinn, Dresden, Baden-Baden and Wiesbaden. The Dostoyevskaya metro station in Saint Petersburg was opened on 30 December 1991, and the station of the same name in Moscow was opened on 19 June 2010, the 75th anniversary of the Moscow Metro. The Moscow station is decorated with murals by artist Ivan Nikolaev depicting scenes from Dostoevsky's works, such as controversial suicides.
In 2021, Kazakhstan celebrated the 200th anniversary of Dostoevsky's birth.
Criticism
Dostoevsky's work did not always gain a positive reception. Some critics, such as Nikolay Dobrolyubov, Ivan Bunin and Vladimir Nabokov, viewed his writing as excessively psychological and philosophical rather than artistic. Others found fault with chaotic and disorganised plots, and others, like Turgenev, objected to "excessive psychologising" and too-detailed naturalism. His style was deemed "prolix, repetitious and lacking in polish, balance, restraint and good taste". Saltykov-Shchedrin, Nikolay Mikhaylovsky and others criticised his puppet-like characters, most prominently in The Idiot, Demons (The Possessed, The Devils) and The Brothers Karamazov. These characters were compared to those of Hoffmann, an author whom Dostoevsky admired.
Basing his estimation on stated criteria of enduring art and individual genius, Nabokov judges Dostoevsky "not a great writer, but rather a mediocre one—with flashes of excellent humour but, alas, with wastelands of literary platitudes in between." Nabokov complains that the novels are peopled by "neurotics and lunatics" and states that Dostoevsky's characters do not develop: "We get them all complete at the beginning of the tale and so they remain." He finds the novels full of contrived "surprises and complications of plot", which are effective when first read, but on second reading, without the shock and benefit of these surprises, appear loaded with "glorified cliché". The Scottish poet and critic Edwin Muir, however, addressed criticism regarding the quality of Dostoevsky's characters, noting that "regarding the 'oddness' of Dostoevsky's characters, it has been pointed out that they perhaps only seem 'pathological', whereas in reality they are 'only visualized more clearly than any figures in imaginative literature'."
Reputation
Dostoevsky's books have been translated into more than 170 languages. The German translator Wilhelm Wolfsohn published one of the first translations, parts of Poor Folk, in an 1846–1847 magazine, and a French translation followed. French, German and Italian translations usually came directly from the original, while English translations were second-hand and of poor quality. The first English translations were by Marie von Thilo in 1881, but the first highly regarded ones were produced between 1912 and 1920 by Constance Garnett. Her flowing and easy translations helped popularise Dostoevsky's novels in anglophone countries, and Bakhtin's Problems of Dostoevsky's Creative Art (1929) (republished and revised as Problems of Dostoevsky's Poetics in 1963) provided further understanding of his style.
Dostoevsky's works were interpreted in film and on stage in many different countries. Princess Varvara Dmitrevna Obolenskaya was among the first to propose staging Crime and Punishment. Dostoevsky did not refuse permission, but he advised against it, as he believed that "each art corresponds to a series of poetic thoughts, so that one idea cannot be expressed in another non-corresponding form". His extensive explanations in opposition to the transposition of his works into other media were groundbreaking in fidelity criticism. He thought that just one episode should be dramatised, or an idea should be taken and incorporated into a separate plot. According to critic Alexander Burry, some of the most effective adaptions are Sergei Prokofiev's opera The Gambler, Leoš Janáček's opera From the House of the Dead, Akira Kurosawa's film The Idiot and Andrzej Wajda's film The Possessed.
After the 1917 Russian Revolution, passages of Dostoevsky books were sometimes shortened, although only two books were censored: Demons and Diary of a Writer. His philosophy, particularly in Demons, was deemed anti-capitalist but also anti-Communist and reactionary. According to historian Boris Ilizarov, Stalin read Dostoevsky's The Brothers Karamazov several times.
Works
Dostoevsky's works of fiction include 16 novels and novellas, 16 short stories, and 5 translations. Many of his longer novels were first published in serialised form in literary magazines and journals. The years given below indicate the year in which the novel's final part or first complete book edition was published. In English many of his novels and stories are known by different titles.
Major works
Poor Folk
Main article: Poor FolkPoor Folk is an epistolary novel that depicts the relationship between the small, elderly official Makar Devushkin and the young seamstress Varvara Dobroselova, remote relatives who write letters to each other. Makar's tender, sentimental adoration for Varvara and her confident, warm friendship for him explain their evident preference for a simple life, although it keeps them in humiliating poverty. An unscrupulous merchant finds the inexperienced girl and hires her as his housewife and guarantor. He sends her to a manor somewhere on a steppe, while Makar alleviates his misery and pain with alcohol.
The story focuses on poor people who struggle with their lack of self-esteem. Their misery leads to the loss of their inner freedom, to dependence on the social authorities, and to the extinction of their individuality. Dostoevsky shows how poverty and dependence are indissolubly aligned with deflection and deformation of self-esteem, combining inward and outward suffering.
Notes from Underground
Main article: Notes from UndergroundNotes from Underground is split into two stylistically different parts, the first essay-like, the second in narrative style. The protagonist and first-person narrator is an unnamed 40-year-old civil servant known as The Underground Man. The only known facts about his situation are that he has quit the service, lives in a basement flat on the outskirts of Saint Petersburg and finances his livelihood from a modest inheritance.
The first part is a record of his thoughts about society and his character. He describes himself as vicious, squalid and ugly; the chief focuses of his polemic are the "modern human" and his vision of the world, which he attacks severely and cynically, and towards which he develops aggression and vengefulness. He considers his own decline natural and necessary. Although he emphasises that he does not intend to publish his notes for the public, the narrator appeals repeatedly to an ill-described audience, whose questions he tries to address.
In the second part he describes scenes from his life that are responsible for his failure in personal and professional life and in his love life. He tells of meeting old school friends, who are in secure positions and treat him with condescension. His aggression turns inward on to himself and he tries to humiliate himself further. He presents himself as a possible saviour to the poor prostitute Liza, advising her to reject self-reproach when she looks to him for hope. Dostoevsky added a short commentary saying that although the storyline and characters are fictional, such things were inevitable in contemporary society.
The Underground Man was very influential for philosophers. His alienated existence from the mainstream influenced modernist literature.
Crime and Punishment
Main article: Crime and PunishmentThe novel Crime and Punishment has received both critical and popular acclaim. It remains one of the most influential and widely read novels in Russian literature, and has been sometimes described as Dostoevsky's magnum opus.
Crime and Punishment follows the mental anguish and moral dilemmas of Rodion Raskolnikov, an impoverished ex-student in Saint Petersburg who plans to kill an unscrupulous pawnbroker, an old woman who stores money and valuable objects in her flat. He theorises that with the money he could liberate himself from poverty and go on to perform great deeds, and seeks to convince himself that certain crimes are justifiable if they are committed in order to remove obstacles to the higher goals of 'extraordinary' men. Once the deed is done, however, he finds himself racked with confusion, paranoia, and disgust. His theoretical justifications lose all their power as he struggles with guilt and horror and confronts both the internal and external consequences of his deed.
Strakhov remarked that "Only Crime and Punishment was read in 1866" and that Dostoevsky had managed to portray a Russian person aptly and realistically. In contrast, Grigory Eliseev of the radical magazine The Contemporary called the novel a "fantasy according to which the entire student body is accused without exception of attempting murder and robbery". The Encyclopædia Britannica describes Crime and Punishment as "a masterpiece" and "one of the finest studies of the psychopathology of guilt written in any language."
The Idiot
Main article: The IdiotThe title is an ironic reference to the central character of the novel, Prince Lev Nikolayevich Myshkin, a young man whose goodness, open-hearted simplicity and guilelessness lead many of the more worldly characters he encounters to mistakenly assume that he lacks intelligence and insight. In the character of Prince Myshkin, Dostoevsky set himself the task of depicting "the positively good and beautiful man." The novel examines the consequences of placing such a singular individual at the centre of the conflicts, desires, passions and egoism of worldly society, both for the man himself and for those with whom he becomes involved.
Joseph Frank describes The Idiot as "the most personal of all Dostoevsky's major works, the book in which he embodies his most intimate, cherished, and sacred convictions." It includes descriptions of some of his most intense personal ordeals, such as epilepsy and mock execution, and explores moral, spiritual and philosophical themes consequent upon them. His primary motivation in writing the novel was to subject his own highest ideal, that of true Christian love, to the crucible of contemporary Russian society.
Demons
Main article: Demons (Dostoevsky novel)Demons is a social and political satire, a psychological drama, and large-scale tragedy. Joyce Carol Oates has described it as "Dostoevsky's most confused and violent novel, and his most satisfactorily 'tragic' work." According to Ronald Hingley, it is Dostoevsky's "greatest onslaught on Nihilism", and "one of humanity's most impressive achievements—perhaps even its supreme achievement—in the art of prose fiction."
Demons is an allegory of the potentially catastrophic consequences of the political and moral nihilism that were becoming prevalent in Russia in the 1860s. A fictional town descends into chaos as it becomes the focal point of an attempted revolution, orchestrated by master conspirator Pyotr Verkhovensky. The mysterious aristocratic figure of Nikolai Stavrogin—Verkhovensky's counterpart in the moral sphere—dominates the book, exercising an extraordinary influence over the hearts and minds of almost all the other characters. The idealistic, Western-influenced generation of the 1840s, epitomized in the character of Stepan Verkhovensky (who is both Pyotr Verkhovensky's father and Nikolai Stavrogin's childhood teacher), is presented as the unconscious progenitors and helpless accomplices of the "demonic" forces that take possession of the town.
The Brothers Karamazov
Main article: The Brothers KaramazovThe Brothers Karamazov is Dostoevsky's largest work. It received both critical and popular acclaim and is often cited as his magnum opus. Composed of 12 "books", the novel tells the story of the novice Alyosha Karamazov, the non-believer Ivan Karamazov, and the soldier Dmitri Karamazov. The first books introduce the Karamazovs. The main plot is the death of their father Fyodor, while other parts are philosophical and religious arguments by Father Zosima to Alyosha.
The most famous chapter is "The Grand Inquisitor", a parable told by Ivan to Alyosha about Christ's Second Coming in Seville, Spain, in which Christ is imprisoned by a ninety-year-old Catholic Grand Inquisitor. Instead of answering him, Christ gives him a kiss, and the Inquisitor subsequently releases him, telling him not to return. The tale was misunderstood as a defence of the Inquisitor, but some, such as Romano Guardini, have argued that the Christ of the parable was Ivan's own interpretation of Christ, "the idealistic product of the unbelief". Ivan, however, has stated that he is against Christ. Most contemporary critics and scholars agree that Dostoevsky is attacking Roman Catholicism and socialist atheism, both represented by the Inquisitor. He warns the readers against a terrible revelation in the future, referring to the Donation of Pepin around 750 and the Spanish Inquisition in the 16th century, which in his view corrupted true Christianity.
Sigmund Freud wrote an essay called "Dostoevsky and Parricide" (German: Dostojewski und die Vatertötung) as an introductory article to a scholarly collection on The Brothers Karamazov.
Bibliography
Main article: Fyodor Dostoevsky bibliography
Novels and novellas
|
Short stories
|
Essay collections
- Winter Notes on Summer Impressions (1863)
- A Writer's Diary (1873–1881)
Translations
- (1843) Eugénie Grandet (Honoré de Balzac)
- (1843) La dernière Aldini (George Sand)
- (1843) Mary Stuart (Friedrich Schiller)
Personal letters
- (1912) Letters of Fyodor Michailovitch Dostoevsky to His Family and Friends by Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoevsky (Author), translator Ethel Colburn Mayne Kessinger Publishing, LLC (26 May 2006) ISBN 978-1-4286-1333-1
Posthumously published notebooks
- (1922) Stavrogin's Confession & the Plan of the Life of a Great Sinner – English translation by Virginia Woolf and S.S. Koteliansky
See also
References
Notes
- UK: /ˌdɒstɔɪˈɛfski/ DOST-oy-EF-skee, US: /ˌdɒstəˈjɛfski, ˌdʌst-/ DOST-ə-YEF-skee, DUST-; Russian: Фёдор Михайлович Достоевский, romanized: Fyodor Mikhaylovich Dostoyevskiy, IPA: [ˈfʲɵdər mʲɪˈxajləvʲɪdʑ dəstɐˈjefskʲɪj] .
- Dostoevsky's name has been variously transcribed into English, his first name sometimes being rendered as Theodore or Fedor and his last name as Dostoyevsky.
Before the postrevolutionary orthographic reform which, among other things, replaced the Cyrillic letter Ѳ with Ф, his name was written Ѳедоръ Михайловичъ Достоевскій. - Time magazine was a popular periodical with more than 4,000 subscribers before it was closed on 24 May 1863 by the Tsarist Regime after publishing an essay by Nikolay Strakhov about the Polish revolt in Russia. Vremya and its 1864 successor Epokha expressed the philosophy of the conservative and Slavophile movement Pochvennichestvo, supported by Dostoevsky during his term of imprisonment and in the following years.
- Another reason for his abstinence might have been the closure of casinos in Germany in 1872 and 1873 (it was not until the rise of Adolf Hitler that they were reopened) or his entering a synagogue that he confused with a gambling hall. According to biographer Joseph Frank, Dostoevsky took that as a sign not to gamble any more.
- The haemorrhage could also have been triggered by heated disputes with his sister Vera about his aunt Aleksandra Kumanina's estate, which was settled on 30 March and discussed in the St Petersburg City Court on 24 July 1879. Anna later acquired a part of his estate consisting of around 185 desiatina (around 500 acres or 202 ha) of forest and 92 desiatina of farmland.
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- Bloshteyn (2007), pp. 7–8.
- Lenin read Dostoevsky in a more-nuanced way than others, describing Demons (1871–72) as "repulsive but great". See Waite, Geoff; Cernia Slovin, Francesca (2016). "Nietzsche with Dostoevsky: Unrequited Collaborators in Crime without Punishment". In Jeff Love; Jeffrey Metzger (eds.). Nietzsche and Dostoevsky: Philosophy, Morality, Tragedy. Chicago: Northwestern University Press. ISBN 9780810133969. For a summary of the Soviet reception of Dostoevsky, see Shlapentokh, Vladimir (1990). Soviet Intellectuals and Political Power: The Post-Stalin Era (1st ed.). Princeton Univ. Press. p. 94. ISBN 9780691094595.
- Vladimir Bushin. Враньё от юного папуаса [Fids from a young Papuan]. Pravda (in Russian). Archived from the original on 29 October 2013.
- Kjetsaa (1989), pp. 69–103.
- Halliwell, Martin (2006). Transatlantic Modernism: Moral Dilemmas in Modernist Fiction. Edinburgh University Press. p. 13. ISBN 978-0-7486-2393-8.
- Eysteinsson, Ástráður (1990). The Concept of Modernism. Cornell University Press. p. 29. ISBN 978-0-8014-8077-5.
- "Greatest Russian Novels of All Time". Goodreads. Retrieved 21 July 2020.
- Arntfield, Michael (2017). Murder in Plain English. New York City: Prometheus. p. 42. ISBN 9781633882546.
- Kjetsaa (1989), p. 183.
- Frank (1997), p. 45, 60–182.
- Cregan-Reid, Vybarr; Bauer, Pat. "Crime and Punishment". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 21 July 2020.
- Dostoevsky letter quoted in Peace, Richard (1971). Dostoyevsky: An Examination of the Major Novels. Cambridge University Press. pp. 59–63. ISBN 0-521-07911-X.
- Frank (2010), p. 577.
- Oates, Joyce Carol (January 1978). "The tragic vision of The Possessed". The Georgia Review. 32 (4 – Winter 1978): 868. See also in Celestial Timepiece Blog.
- Hingley (1978), pp. 158–9.
- Rollberg, Peter (2014). "Mastermind, Terrorist, Enigma: Dostoevsky's Nikolai Stavrogin". Perspectives on Political Science. 43 (3): 143–52. doi:10.1080/10457097.2014.917244. S2CID 145671815.
- Frank (2003), pp. 390–441.
- ^ Frank (1997), pp. 567–705.
- ^ Kjetsaa (1989), pp. 337–414.
- Müller (1982), pp. 91–103.
- Dostoyefsky, F.M. (1920). "A Beggar Boy at Christ's Christmas Tree". Little Russian Masterpieces. Chosen and translated by Zénaïde A. Ragozin. Introduction and biographical notes by S.N. Syromiatnikof. New York: G.P. Putnam's Sons. p. 172.
Bibliography
- Bercken, Wil van den (2011). Christian Fiction and Religious Realism in the Novels of Dostoevsky. Anthem Press. ISBN 978-0-85728-976-6.
- Bloshteyn, Maria R. (2007). The Making of a Counter-Culture Icon: Henry Miller's Dostoevsky. University of Toronto Press. ISBN 978-0-8020-9228-1.
- Breger, Louis (2008). Dostoevsky: The Author As Psychoanalyst. Transaction Publishers. ISBN 978-1-4128-0843-9.
- Burry, Alexander (2011). Multi-Mediated Dostoevsky: Transposing Novels Into Opera, Film, and Drama. Northwestern University Press. ISBN 978-0-8101-2715-9.
- Cassedy, Steven (2005). Dostoevsky's Religion. Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-0-8047-5137-7.
- Cicovacki, Predrag (2012). Dostoevsky and the Affirmation of Life. Transaction Publishers. ISBN 978-1-4128-4606-6.
- Goldstein, David (1981). Dostoevsky and the Jews. Foreword by Joseph Frank. University of Texas Press. ISBN 978-0-292-71528-8.
- Hingley, Ronald (1978). Dostoyevsky His Life and Work. London: Paul Elek Limited. ISBN 0-236-40121-1.
- Jones, Malcolm V. (2005). Dostoevsky And the Dynamics of Religious Experience. Anthem Press. ISBN 978-1-84331-205-5.
- Jones, Malcolm V.; Terry, Garth M. (2010). New Essays on Dostoyevsky. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-15531-1.
- Lantz, Kenneth A. (2004). The Dostoevsky Encyclopedia. Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-313-30384-5.
- Lauer, Reinhard (2000). Geschichte der Russischen Literatur: von 1700 bis zur Gegenwart (in German). Verlag C.H. Beck. ISBN 978-3-406-50267-5.
- Lavrin, Janko (2005). Dostoevsky: A Study. Kessinger Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4179-8844-0.
- Leatherbarrow, William J (2002). The Cambridge Companion to Dostoevskii. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-65473-9.
- Maurina, Zenta (1940). A Prophet of the Soul: Fyodor Dostoievsky. Translated by C. P. Finlayson. James Clarke & Co. Ltd.
- Meier-Gräfe, Julius (1988) . Dostojewski der Dichter (in German). Insel Verlag. ISBN 978-3-458-32799-8.
- Mochulsky, Konstantin (1967) . Dostoevsky: His Life and Work. Minihan, Michael A. (translator). Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-01299-5.
- Müller, Ludolf (1982). Dostojewskij: Sein Leben, Sein Werk, Sein Vermächtnis (in German). Erich Wewel Verlag. ISBN 978-3-87904-100-8.
- Paperno, Irina (1997). Suicide as a Cultural Institution in Dostoevsky's Russia. Cornell University Press. ISBN 978-0-8014-8425-4.
- Pattison, George; Thompson, Diane Oenning (2001). Dostoevsky and the Christian tradition. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-78278-4.
- Popović, Justin (2007). Философия и религия Достоевского [Philosophical and Religious Beliefs of Dostoyevsky] (in Russian). Издатель Д.В. Харченко. ISBN 978-985-90125-1-8.
- Scanlan, James Patrick (2002). Dostoevsky the Thinker: A Philosophical Study. Cornell University Press. ISBN 978-0-8014-3994-0.
- Sekirin, Peter, ed. (1997). The Dostoevsky Archive: Firsthand Accounts of the Novelist from Contemporaries' Memoirs and Rare Periodicals, Most Translated Into English for the First Time, with a Detailed Lifetime Chronology and Annotated Bibliography. McFarland. ISBN 978-0-7864-0264-9.
- Terras, Victor (1998). Reading Dostoevsky. University of Wisconsin Press. ISBN 978-0-299-16054-8.
- Biographies
- Bloom, Harold (2004). Fyodor Dostoevsky. Infobase Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7910-8117-4.
- Frank, Joseph (2010). Dostoevsky: A Writer in His Time. Princeton University Press. ISBN 9780691128191.
- Frank, Joseph (2003) . Dostoevsky: The Mantle of the Prophet, 1871–1881. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-11569-6.
- Frank, Joseph (1997) . Dostoevsky: The Miraculous Years, 1865–1871. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-01587-3.
- Frank, Joseph (1988) . Dostoevsky: The Stir of Liberation, 1860–1865. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-01452-4.
- Frank, Joseph (1987) . Dostoevsky: The Years of Ordeal, 1850–1859. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-01422-7.
- Frank, Joseph (1979) . Dostoevsky: The Seeds of Revolt, 1821–1849. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-01355-8.
- Kjetsaa, Geir (1989). Fyodor Dostoyevsky: A Writer's Life. Fawcett Columbine. ISBN 978-0-449-90334-6.
- Lavrin, Janko (1947). Dostoevsky. New York The Macmillan Company. OCLC 646160256.
Further reading
- Allen, James Sloan (2008), "Condemned to Be Free," Worldly Wisdom: Great Books and the Meanings of Life, Savannah: Frederic C. Beil. ISBN 978-1-929490-35-6
- Birmingham, Kevin. 2021. The sinner and the saint: Dostoevsky and the gentleman murderer who inspired a masterpiece. New York: Penguin.
- Berdyaev, Nicolas (1948). The Russian Idea, The Macmillan Company.
- Bierbaum, Otto Julius (1910–1911). "Dostoyevsky and Nietzsche," The Hibbert Journal, Vol. IX.
- Hubben, William. (1997). Dostoevsky, Kierkegaard, Nietzsche, and Kafka: Four Prophets of Our Destiny, Simon & Schuster. Originally published in 1952.
- Lavrin, Janko (1918). "Dostoyevsky and Certain of his Problems," Part II, Part III, Part IV, Part V, Part VI, Part VII, Part VIII, Part IX, Part X, The New Age, Vol. XXII, Nos. 12–21.
- Lavrin, Janko (1918). "The Dostoyevsky Problem," The New Age, Vol. XXII, No. 24, pp. 465–66.
- Maeztu, Ramiro de (1918). "Dostoyevsky the Manichean," The New Age, Vol. XXII, No. 23, 1918, pp. 449–51.
- Manning, Clarence Augustus (1922). "Dostoyevsky and Modern Russian Literature," The Sewanee Review, Vol. 30, No. 3.
- Seccombe, Thomas (1911). "Dostoievsky, Feodor Mikhailovich" . In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 8 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 438–439.
- Simmons, Ernest J. (1940). Dostoevsky: The Making Of A Novelist, Vintage Books.
- Westbrook, Perry D. (1961). The Greatness of Man: An Essay on Dostoyevsky and Whitman. New York: Thomas Yoseloff.
External links
Digital collections
- Dostoevsky books and audiobooks in Russian language (Original)
- Works by Fyodor Dostoevsky in eBook form at Standard Ebooks
- Works by Fyodor Dostoyevsky at Project Gutenberg
- Works by or about Fyodor Dostoevsky at the Internet Archive
- Works by Fyodor Dostoevsky at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)
- Fyodor Dostoyevsky collection at One More Library
- The complete works of Fyodor Dostoyevsky (in Russian) – the online published bibliography in its original language
Scholarly works
- International Dostoevsky Society – a network of scholars dedicated to studying the life and works of Fyodor Dostoevsky
- Archives of Dostoevsky Studies ISSN 1013-2309, a journal published from 1980 to 1988
Other links
- Fyodor Dostoevsky at the Internet Book List
- Dostoevsky, Fyodor (8 June 2016). A Novel in Nine Letters. Translated by Garnett, Constance Clara. Also available in the original Russian Archived 15 April 2018 at the Wayback Machine.
- Dostoevsky, Fyodor (4 March 2017). The Dream of a Ridiculous Man. Translated by Garnett, Constance. Archived from the original on 15 April 2018. Retrieved 15 April 2018.
- Newspaper clippings about Fyodor Dostoevsky in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW
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