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Crime And Punishment Essay Research Paper Comparison

Crime And Punishment Essay, Research Paper


Comparison Essay between Crime and Punishment and Notes from the


Underground


Fyodor Dostoyevsky?s stories are stories of a sort of rebirth. He


weaves a tale of suffering and how each character attempts to deliver


themselves from this misery. In the novel Crime and Punishment, he


tells the story of Raskolnikov, a former student who murders an old


pawnbroker as an attempt to prove a theory. In Notes from the


Underground, we are given a chance to explore Dostoyevsky?s opinion of


human beings.


Dostoyevsky?s characters are very similar, as is his stories. He puts


a strong stress on the estrangement and isolation his characters feel.


His characters are both brilliant and ?sick? as mentioned in each novel,


poisoned by their intelligence. In Notes from the Underground, the


character, who is never given a name, writes his journal from solitude.


He is spoiled by his intelligence, giving him a fierce conceit with


which he lashes out at the world and justifies the malicious things he


does. At the same time, though, he speaks of the doubt he feels at the


value of human thought and purpose and later, of human life. He


believes that intelligence, to be constantly questioning and


?faithless(ly) drifting? between ideas, is a curse. To be damned to see


everything, clearly as a window (and that includes things that aren?t


meant to be seen, such as the corruption in the world) or constantly


seeking the meaning of

things elusive. Dostoyevsky thought that humans


are evil, destructive and irrational.


In Crime and Punishment, we see Raskolnikov caught between reason and


will, the human needs for personal freedom and the need to submit to


authority. He spends most of the first two parts stuck between wanting


to act and wanting to observe. After he acts and murders the old


woman, he spends much time contemplating confession. Raskolnikov seems


trapped in his world although there is really nothing holding him back;


he chooses not to flee and not to confess, but still acts as though he?s


suffocation (perhaps guilt?)In both novels defeat seems inevitable.


Both characters believe that normal man is stupid, unsatisfied and


confused. Perhaps they are right, but both characters fail to see the


positive aspects of humans; the closest was the scene between the


narrator of Notes from the Underground and Liza. In this scene he


almost lets the human side show, rather than the insecure, closed off


person he normally is.


I assert that Dostoyevsky?s characters are (clinically) depressive of


some sort. They complain of a detachment to life and alienation from


other people, just going through the motions. They are suffering, but


are unwilling to give up and are also helpless in terms of feeling


better. They are confused as to what to do in the future and see it


only as a bleak possibility, just more problems. And with the collapse


of certainty, men and women will do crazy things.

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