Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoevsky, 1821-1881 Raznochinets -- father an army doctor, mother from petty...

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Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoevsky, 1821-1881 Raznochinets -- father an army doctor, mother from petty gentry Early success and recognition by literary critic Belinsky for Poor Folk Joined secret society, Petreshevtsy, and conspiratorial Speshnev group

Transcript of Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoevsky, 1821-1881 Raznochinets -- father an army doctor, mother from petty...

Page 1: Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoevsky, 1821-1881 Raznochinets -- father an army doctor, mother from petty gentry Early success and recognition by literary critic.

Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoevsky, 1821-1881 Fyodor Mikhailovich

Dostoevsky, 1821-1881• Raznochinets -- father

an army doctor, mother from petty gentry

• Early success and recognition by literary critic Belinsky for Poor Folk

• Joined secret society, Petreshevtsy, and conspiratorial Speshnev group

• Raznochinets -- father an army doctor, mother from petty gentry

• Early success and recognition by literary critic Belinsky for Poor Folk

• Joined secret society, Petreshevtsy, and conspiratorial Speshnev group

Page 2: Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoevsky, 1821-1881 Raznochinets -- father an army doctor, mother from petty gentry Early success and recognition by literary critic.

“Life is everywhere, life is in ourselves, not in the exterior”“Life is everywhere, life is in

ourselves, not in the exterior”

• Arrested April 23, 1849, incarcerated in Peter and Paul Fortress

• Mock execution on Semyonovsky Square Dec. 22, 1849 orchestrated personally by Nicholas I,

• 10 years of penal servitude and exile, service in the Russian army

• Horrified by moral depravity of convicts, Developed epilepsy, Converted to Christianity

• Arrested April 23, 1849, incarcerated in Peter and Paul Fortress

• Mock execution on Semyonovsky Square Dec. 22, 1849 orchestrated personally by Nicholas I,

• 10 years of penal servitude and exile, service in the Russian army

• Horrified by moral depravity of convicts, Developed epilepsy, Converted to Christianity

Page 3: Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoevsky, 1821-1881 Raznochinets -- father an army doctor, mother from petty gentry Early success and recognition by literary critic.

Charles Fourier, 1772-1837Charles Fourier, 1772-1837

• Believed that mutual concern and cooperation key to human progress

• Envisioned utopian community/complex Phalansteries

• Identified 12 common passions that resulted in 810 character types

• Ideas influential in revolution of 1848

• Believed that mutual concern and cooperation key to human progress

• Envisioned utopian community/complex Phalansteries

• Identified 12 common passions that resulted in 810 character types

• Ideas influential in revolution of 1848

Page 4: Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoevsky, 1821-1881 Raznochinets -- father an army doctor, mother from petty gentry Early success and recognition by literary critic.

Dostoevsky and the New Men

Dostoevsky and the New Men

• Auguste Comte (1798-1857), founder of sociology, European Positivism -- applied scientific principles to the study of social life

• Nikolai Chernyshevsky (1828-1889), radical journalist, literary critic writer, martyr. Arrested for criticism of Emancipation, wrote supremely influential novel What is to Be Done? While in Peter and Paul Fortress

• Auguste Comte (1798-1857), founder of sociology, European Positivism -- applied scientific principles to the study of social life

• Nikolai Chernyshevsky (1828-1889), radical journalist, literary critic writer, martyr. Arrested for criticism of Emancipation, wrote supremely influential novel What is to Be Done? While in Peter and Paul Fortress

Page 5: Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoevsky, 1821-1881 Raznochinets -- father an army doctor, mother from petty gentry Early success and recognition by literary critic.

The Underground Man’s Refutations: Comte

The Underground Man’s Refutations: Comte

• Auguste Comte: history rational “law of the three phases” (theological, metaphysical, positive). In positive phase all obscure and supernatural forces are denied, and only observable laws of nature recognized. Humankind advances through stages by force of intellect, reason, logic. Believed that human beings could find scientific solutions to social problems

• Emphasis on quantitative, mathematical basis for decision making basis for modern quantitative statistical analysis and business decision making

• Auguste Comte: history rational “law of the three phases” (theological, metaphysical, positive). In positive phase all obscure and supernatural forces are denied, and only observable laws of nature recognized. Humankind advances through stages by force of intellect, reason, logic. Believed that human beings could find scientific solutions to social problems

• Emphasis on quantitative, mathematical basis for decision making basis for modern quantitative statistical analysis and business decision making

Page 6: Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoevsky, 1821-1881 Raznochinets -- father an army doctor, mother from petty gentry Early success and recognition by literary critic.

The Underground Man’s Refutations: Chernyshevsky

The Underground Man’s Refutations: Chernyshevsky

• The Anthropological Principle in Philosophy (1860)

Denies free will, every action of man due to the laws of nature, not own initiative

Rational Egoism: if human kind becomes completely enlightened as to their own interests, they will be unable to act contrary to them (and thus irrationally)

• The Anthropological Principle in Philosophy (1860)

Denies free will, every action of man due to the laws of nature, not own initiative

Rational Egoism: if human kind becomes completely enlightened as to their own interests, they will be unable to act contrary to them (and thus irrationally)

Page 7: Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoevsky, 1821-1881 Raznochinets -- father an army doctor, mother from petty gentry Early success and recognition by literary critic.

Chernyshevsky’s Crystal Palace vs. Dostoevsky’s Crystal Edifice

Chernyshevsky’s Crystal Palace vs. Dostoevsky’s Crystal Edifice

• Crystal Palace embodiment of Chernyshevsky’s utopia: everyone good, happy, prosperous by conformity w/ laws of nature

• Dostoevsky’s narrator refuses to accept what is foisted upon him by laws of nature as ultimately desirable, the ideal

“Well, do change it, tempt me with something else, give me another ideal”

• Crystal Palace embodiment of Chernyshevsky’s utopia: everyone good, happy, prosperous by conformity w/ laws of nature

• Dostoevsky’s narrator refuses to accept what is foisted upon him by laws of nature as ultimately desirable, the ideal

“Well, do change it, tempt me with something else, give me another ideal”

Page 8: Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoevsky, 1821-1881 Raznochinets -- father an army doctor, mother from petty gentry Early success and recognition by literary critic.

The Underground Man: A History of Misreadings

The Underground Man: A History of Misreadings

• Not read at all: no critical response until after Dostoevsky’s death

• Chapter X of Intro. mutilated by censorship: the essential idea of the work “necessity of faith and Christ”

• A series of affirmations: affirms the whole of man (irrationality, impurity); affirms free will and thus moral conscience, good and evil

• Not read at all: no critical response until after Dostoevsky’s death

• Chapter X of Intro. mutilated by censorship: the essential idea of the work “necessity of faith and Christ”

• A series of affirmations: affirms the whole of man (irrationality, impurity); affirms free will and thus moral conscience, good and evil

Page 9: Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoevsky, 1821-1881 Raznochinets -- father an army doctor, mother from petty gentry Early success and recognition by literary critic.

Discussion Questions for “Apropos the Falling Sleet”

Discussion Questions for “Apropos the Falling Sleet”• How do the Underground Man’s arguments

about the following in Part I play out in the events he relates in his confession?

-- suffering-- free will vs. determinism-- rational self-interest-- thinking (consciousness) as a

disease

• How do the Underground Man’s arguments about the following in Part I play out in the events he relates in his confession?

-- suffering-- free will vs. determinism-- rational self-interest-- thinking (consciousness) as a

disease