Dostoevsky and the Image of Russia
Introduction: The Artist as a Diagnost and a Prophet
Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoevsky (1821-1881) created in his works not a description of Russia, but its metaphysical and psychological portrait, which for a century ahead determined discussions about Russian identity. His image of Russia is not a static picture, but a tense field of eternal confrontation and dialogue between extremes: holiness and sin, humility and rebellion, universal responsiveness and national closure, "soil" and "civilization." This image is constructed not through landscapes or everyday life, but through the existential crises of his heroes, who bear various "Russian ideas."
1. Russia as a "Sick" and Cathartic Space
Dostoevsky sees Russia not in its greatness, but in its deep diseases and contradictions, which, however, contain the seed of future healing.
"Crime and Punishment": Petersburg is not the capital of the empire, but a fantastic city-trap, oppressing consciousness. Its dirty stairs, stifling cells, drunken crowds — an environment that breeds "plagues" like Raskolnikov's theory. Russia here is a sick body, giving birth to a spiritual ulcer of nihilism.
"The Demons": A provincial town engulfed by the madness of a revolutionary conspiracy — a microcosm of Russian "demons," that is, obsession with alien, rootless ideas (western socialism, atheism). Russia is depicted as a battlefield for souls, easily susceptible to destructive temptations.
Catharsis through suffering: However, this illness is not a death sentence. The path to salvation lies through suffering, repentance, and humility, as in Raskolnikov's imprisonment or Dmitry Karamazov's humility. According to Dostoevsky, Russia is a country that can spiritually resurrect only by passing through the abyss of decline.
2. "Russian Idea": Messianism and Universal Responsiveness
The central construct of the image of Russia in Dostoevsky is the messianic "Russian idea," formulated in the "Diary of a Writer" ...
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