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Crime and Punishment is a novel by the Russian author Fyodor Dostoevsky. It is considered the first great novel of his mature period of writing and is often cited as one of the greatest works of world literature. 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…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Crime and Punishment is a novel by the Russian author Fyodor Dostoevsky. It is considered the first great novel of his mature period of writing and is often cited as one of the greatest works of world literature. 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 wracked with confusion, paranoia, and disgust. His theoretical justifications lose all their power as he struggles with guilt and horror and is confronted with both internal and external consequences of his deed. Drawing upon experiences from his own prison days, Dostoyevsky recounts in feverish, compelling tones a psychological thriller infused with forceful religious, social, and philosophical elements.
Autorenporträt
Fyodor Dostoevsky (born in Russia, in 1821) is one of the world's most influential authors, but he lived nearly as many lives as he created on the page. He was a trained military engineer. A civil servant with a side hustle translating manuscripts. A political prisoner and death row inmate serving time in a Siberian prison camp. A reluctant soldier. A journalist. A husband. A gambler on a constant cold streak. It's this lived experience that brings such unmatched depth to his writing-from exile to acclaim, success to suffering, imagination to dark self-destruction. Like his greatest protagonists, the author himself was occasionally detestable and frequently brilliant, and it was through this hard wrought lens that he explored some of life's most urgent themes: faith and free will, self-interest and moral duty, individual responsibility, loneliness, and love. During the lean years, Dostoevsky searched for life's meaning with the same ferocity he chased a lucky break, and his most famous books-Crime and Punishment, The Idiot, The Brothers Karamazov, and Notes from Underground-established him as one of the first existentialists. These works went on to inspire an entire movement, and great minds from Nietzsche to Virginia Woolf to Murakami. When Dostoevsky died at the age of 59, at the height of his literary fame, he had created more than a dozen novels, novellas, and countless short works. Nearly 200 years later, these stories are just as relevant and relatable-in our TikTok feeds and neighborhood book clubs-as they were in the boisterous taverns and literary circles of Imperial Russia. And as the world gets more chaotic and clamoring each year, Dostoevsky's voice becomes clearer.