Dostoevsky’s Crime Unknown facts

Dostoevsky’s Crime -Unknown facts about Dostoevsky’s Crime and Punishment

Dostoevsky's Crime
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Crime and Punishment, one of the most well-known classic Russian novels, was published by Russian author Fyodor Dostoevsky in 12 parts over the course of 1866. It has been around for more than 150 years, and in this discussion, we will go over some facts that some readers may not be aware of about the book.

It was filmed in actual Petersburg.

The most evident fact of Crime and Punishment is that while Dostoevsky based some of the names on actual locations in St. Petersburg, he destroyed others, such as V—y Prospect, which refers to Voznesensky Prospect.

Raskolnikov concealed the loot behind a genuine stone.

Anna Grigoryevna, Dostoevsky’s wife, recalled in her memoirs that immediately after their wedding, the author showed her the stone from his most well-known book while they were walking through a yard. However, the stone has since vanished.

Dostoevsky’s Crime-The significance of names

The name Raskolnikov was not chosen at random by the author. The word raskol, which means separatists in Russian, is where the name’s first part, which means wicked, comes from. The Russian Orthodox Church’s oldest sect, which broke away in the middle of the seventeenth century, was given this name. The term Razumikhin is the source of the name Razumikhin. Reason and logic are referred to as razum.

Real-life Svidrigailov, who appears in the book

Dostoevsky's Crime
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The real Svidrigailov was known among rural landowners in Saint Petersburg in the 1860s, and this name was used to talk about a mysterious and dubious merchant. As far as we know, however, the real Svidrigailov was not as cruel as the novel’s protagonist, who was an unfair, harsh, and rapist.

The majority of the news articles the author in the book publishes are factual.

This is made abundantly evident when the hero reads the newspaper while relaxing in the bar and once more while speaking with police officer Zamytov after going into a stupor. The criminal accomplice’s jittery trip to the bank aroused questions and made the entire scheme public.

Some readers are more knowledgeable about Dunya than others.

At the conclusion of Crime and Punishment, Donya, the murderer’s sister, has an unforgettable chat with Svidrigailov, her fiancé and former boss, in which he informs her that her brother committed the crime.

But in the original Russian version, Donya starts to address the other person in the singular, which is the form used to address family members and close friends. This gives the impression to readers that her relationship with him goes beyond their initial impression of him, and she eventually tries to shoot him before running away and killing herself. Long.

Dostoevsky’s true personality is largely present in Raskolnikov

Three significant sections from Dostoevsky’s life may be found in the crime novel Punishment, which is not surprising. The first is the dream described at the start of the book, in which young Raskolnikov witnesses a horse owner whipping his animal to death. Dostoevsky stated in his autobiography that he constantly recalls seeing a distressed horse when he was a boy.

And the feeling the protagonist experienced after assisting Marmeladov’s widow and her children, which he compared to the feeling of a person who had been sentenced to death and was then unexpectedly freed. In fact, Dostoevsky experienced this exact same thing in 1849 after being arrested due to his affiliation with Farriere circles and having his death sentence commuted by a letter from the Tsar minutes before his execution.

The main character Raskolnikov was undoubtedly imprisoned in Siberia, the same location where Dostoevsky spent 4 years in prison for the prior political crime (Siberia is located on the banks of a large, lonely river with a fort).

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