A desperate young man plans the
perfect crime - the murder of a despicable pawnbroker, an old woman no one loves and no
one will mourn. Is it not just, he reaons, for a man of genius to commit such a crime, to
transgress moral law - if it will ultimately benefit humanity? So begins one of the
greatest novels ever written: a powerful psychological study, a terrifying murder mystery,
a fascinating detective thriller infused with philosophical, religious and social
commentary. Raskolnikov, an impoverished student living in a garret in the gloomy slums of
St. Petersburg, carries out his grotesque scheme and plunges into a hell of persecution,
madness and terror. CRIME AND PUNISHMENT takes the reader on a journey into the darkest
recesses of the criminal and depraved mind, and exposes the soul of a man possessed by
both good and evil...a man who cannot escape his own conscience.
When Fyodor Dostoevsky was twenty-eight, he was arrested by
the Czars secret police and sentenced to death, along with other members of a group
that supported revolutionary political and social ideas. (His particular crime was
publishing illegal articles advocating changes in Russian society.) When the prisoners
were bound and waiting to be shot, and as the Czars firing squad readied for the
execution, a royal messenger dramatically announced a reprieve. The mens lives were
spared.
The spectacular salvation had been prearranged. The Czar had merely wanted to frighten the
men and demonstrate his power. Dostoevsky got the message.
More important, his escape from death- followed by four years of imprisonment in Siberia-
had an enormous impact on his life and work.
When you read Dostoevskys novels, its easy to see how his experiences
influenced his choice of theme and character. This is especially true of Crime and
Punishment, published in 1867, which tells the story of a brilliant but emotionally
tortured young man whose theories about human behavior make him think he is above the law.
At the end of Part Two of the novel, for example, Raskolnikov, the main character,
suddenly feels a boundlessly full and powerful life welling up in him. He
compares the emotion to the reaction of a man condemned to death and unexpectedly
reprieved. The source and significance of that image are overwhelmingly clear.
Dostoevskys prison experience provoked his interest in the causes of crime.
It also made him wonder about the usefulness of punishment. In a letter describing his
plan to write Crime and Punishment, he said, Punishment meted out by the law to the
criminal deters the criminal far less than the lawgivers think.... He believed that
in order for punishment to work, it had to make the criminal accept his own guilt. His
ideas about rehabilitating criminals were far ahead of the accepted attitudes of his time.
Another of Dostoevskys innovative attitudes about crime and punishment was his
emphasis on the emotional or psychological reasons why people commit crimes. In his time
social scientists had only begun to use emotional factors as an explanation for changes in
peoples behavior. The field of criminology, which studies the various causes of
crime, was not clearly formulated until about 1910.
There are other experiences in Dostoevskys life that are important to understanding
Crime and Punishment. At seventeen he left home to study engineering in a military school
in St. Petersburg (now called Leningrad). He was miserable there, partly because he was
really more interested in literature than in science.
Also, incredible poverty plagued his student life. Often he went hungry, and he knew all
about pawnbrokers as a poor mans only source of money. He frequented taverns and was
acquainted with the seedy part of life in the city. The stifling, poverty-stricken slums
and the teeming, drunken crowds in the Haymarket Square section of St. Petersburg are so
vividly described in Crime and Punish-
ment because he knew them from personal experience. From the beginning Dostoevskys
fiction depicted desperately poor men and women.
Dostoevskys fascination with doubling- the psychological term to describe dual
personalities- is one of the reasons hes often described as one of the first modern
novelists. Characters with double personalities exist in many old legends and tales, but
his analysis of such characters as emotionally, and often mentally, disturbed was
provocative and influential. In fact, Crime and Punishment is still used in psychology
lectures to illustrate the phenomenon of split personalities.
You can understand even more about the ideas that obsessed Dostoevsky if you know what
happened to his father. At about the time Dostoevsky moved to St. Petersburg, his father,
with whom hed never been close, was murdered by the outraged serfs on his country
estate. Many readers, searching for ways to explain some of the emotional instability in
the authors own life, point to this murder as a key influence. Fathers arent
ever depicted very positively in his work; in Crime and Punishment the only father we see
is a bad one.
Scholars whove written about Dostoevsky often suggest a connection between the
epileptic seizures that began to plague him in the 1840s and his fathers death. In
Crime and Punishment the novelist himself suggests a connection between emotional problems
and physical illness; it would be fascinating to know if he saw his own illness as
psychologically based.
The period of Russian history in which Dostoevsky lived and wrote was tumultuous. New
ideas for change were in the air, as his own early political ideas il-
lustrate. Russian serfs were freed in 1861. Many Russian thinkers believed that their
nation should forge closer ties with Western Europe and become modern, an idea
Dostoevsky rejected.
Believers in Nihilism, one of the most influential movements of the period, preached the
need to destroy the existing social and political systems even if nothing had been set up
to replace what was destroyed. Dostoevsky, after his prison experience, was repelled by
this negative view of life, even though its advocates offered some constructive ideas for
reform.
Another idea that was in the air was that of the superman, an extraordinary
individual set apart from most other men. The German philosopher Georg Friedrich Hegel had
written a great deal on the subject, and his countryman Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche
developed the idea in different ways during the 1880s. Hegel suggested that a superman
works for the good of mankind, whereas Nietzsches idea was that a superman was
primarily interested in self-gratification. The character Raskolnikov in Crime and
Punishment uses the idea of the superman to help justify the murder he commits. Dostoevsky
challenges us to weigh Raskolnikovs ideas against the seriousness of his crime and
draw our own conclusions.
Dostoevskys fascination with suffering is based on his religious beliefs- fervent
but not always orthodox Christianity. Christian ideas of forgiveness, salvation, and
rebirth (or resurrection) of the spirit are also central to Crime and Punishment.
The novel is exciting to read because Dostoevsky makes these ideas come alive in a
suspenseful story. As you read the novel, youll be challenged to form your own
opinions about contradictory views of human behavior. Does Dostoevsky want us to agree
with Raskolnikov that some people have the right to commit crimes? There are times when
you think he does, and other times when youre sure he doesnt. |