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Two Thoughts with but a Single Mind : Crime and Punishment and the Writing of Fiction

By Barber, Paul and Elizabeth

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Book Id: WPLBN0004451114
Format Type: PDF eBook:
File Size: 1.70 MB
Reproduction Date: 11/6/2016

Title: Two Thoughts with but a Single Mind : Crime and Punishment and the Writing of Fiction  
Author: Barber, Paul and Elizabeth
Volume:
Language: English
Subject: Fiction, Drama and Literature, Literary criticism, Dostoevsky
Collections: Authors Community, Literature
Historic
Publication Date:
2016
Publisher: Cassandrine Publications
Member Page: Paul Barber

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And Elizabeth Barber, B. P., & Zirin, M. F. (2016). Two Thoughts with but a Single Mind : Crime and Punishment and the Writing of Fiction. Retrieved from http://gutenberg.cc/


Description
Examining Dostoevskys narrative choices in Crime and Punishment lays bare the fundamental processes by which novelists makeand are forced to makechoices as they write. Each choice entails particular types of results for the story: desirable, useful, awkward, or even hopeless dead ends. Honed during years of studying the practical problems of creating vividness in fiction, this mode of analysis is based on rigorous use of evidence and deduction. Dostoevskys subject in Crime and Punishment is an epiphany, and he chose to write about it by creating a character whose name meansschismand turning the pieces of his shattered mind into separate characters. Raskolnikovs friend Razumikhin is named from a word meaningreason”: whenever he shows up, someone gets a little smarter. The name of the main female, Sonia, is a diminutive of Sophia, Greek forwisdom”: whenever she shows up, someone gets wise to himself. The fabled coincidences that scholars find in this novel arent coincidences at all on the metaphorical level. Dostoevsky doesnt exactly conceal from the reader that his characters are all parts of Raskolnikov, but he cant make it too explicit either. If he did, the readers ribs would get very sore from all that nudging. But he does put in plenty of clues. For example, Svidrigailov, late in the story, remembers something that had happened not to him, but to Raskolnikov when the latter was all alone. At another point the narrator even gets the name of a character wrong, and it stayswrongfrom then onunless the casual mention of a name-day ceremony is a hint that the change was purposeful. As the destructive parts of Raskolnikovs mind are killed or evicted, he moves toward wholeness. But Dostoevskys choice here creates a serious problem. When Raskolnikov kills the pawnbroker, his mental and emotional state becomes worse, so she must represent a good part of his mind, deteriorated by neglect. If thats so, wouldnt she have to revive for Raskolnikov to recover? But dont take our word: Dostoevsky will be happy to show you his solution himself. The results of all this analysis not only reveal the devices of fiction and of Dostoevsky, but move the reader from perceiving Crime and Punishment as merelygrippingto seeing it as one of the most splendid and touchingly beautiful novels ever written.

Excerpt
(From Chap. 1:) “Raskolnikovis derived from a Russian word forschism” (raskol). Should we miss the hint, Raskolnikov has a friend whose name, Razumikhin, is derived from a word meaningreason” (razum). And if we miss even that hint, Razumikhin says about Raskolnikov that it isas if there really were two opposite characters in him, changing places with each other.” And if all this gets by us, the heroines name isSonia,” which is a diminutive of the GreekSophia,” orWisdom”…

Table of Contents
Introduction 1 Historical background of the novel: where Dostoevskys mind was in 1865. Synopsis of the plot Part I 15 1. In Authors Purgatory, or, Old Wine in New Bottles 16 Dostoevskys problem of how to write a novel about the workings of one persons mind, while maintaining the cognitive principles of contrast and coherence basic to literary composition Fig. 1: Icon of St. Elijah (Ilia): details 22 2. Two Thoughts with but a Single Mind 23 Literary problems of and Dostoevskys handling of allegory and metaphor; his choice to split both Raskolnikov and the story 3. It was a Dark and Stormy Night 35 The literary construction of symbols and symbolism, and how Dostoevsky applied this technique to Crime and Punishment 4. The Poof! Perplex 42 Handling Raskolnikovs divided mind; reification as a technique to show Raskolnikovs possible choices 5. Laughing Yourself Purple, or, The Whore of Babylon 52 Razumikhin; the allegorical names, and why the characters keep saying they arerelatedto each other; Porfirii and symbolic colors 6. The Battle of the Gods and the Giants 61 Luzhin, the rational egoist; the literal and metaphorical struggles; the metaphor of Lebeziatnikovs miraculously improved eyesight Part II 68 7. The Hungry She-Wolf 69 Dostoevskys Russian mysticism; the healthy vs. unhealthy in Raskolnikov 8. When Sonias Not at Home 80 Svidrigailov, the sensual egoist and liar; his neighbor Sonias part in Raskolnikovs epiphanymore tenets of mysticism 9. The Ghost of Topers Future 93 30 pieces of silver; Marmeladovs function; how the metaphorical events (not therealones) dictate the time-line 10. Yet Heres a Spot 101 Katerina Ivanovna; Dostoevskys symbolic use of housing 11. Renovations in the House of Mirrors 110 Mikolka and the symbols of repainting: changing motives for the murder; Mikolka and Gogol Fig. 2: Bacchanal before a Statue of Pan: detail 122 12. Hellfire in Arcadia 123 Pan, the Devil, and Svidrigailov 13. Lord of the Flies 138 Svidrigailovs battle with Dunia; defeat at Adrianople Epilogue: Seeing Double 148 More aspects of Dostoevskys use of contrast and coherence, reification, and metaphor; the organization of the novel at the metaphorical level; fire and other motifs; Aliona and LizavetaAppendix 168 Names of the characters in the novel and their meanings Bibliography 17

 
 



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