Results 71 to 80 of about 5,455 (218)
Raskolnikov: Not the Typical Criminal Man [PDF]
Criminologists in the nineteenth century gave much effort to identify, classify, and understand the physical, social, and psychological characteristics of the world’s criminals.
Noonan, Mary C
core +1 more source
The Stranger Within: Dostoevsky's Underground [PDF]
In Fyodor Dostoevsky’s influential novel Notes from underground, we find one of the most memorable characters in nineteenth century literature. The Underground Man, around whom everything else in this book revolves, is in some respects utterly repugnant:
Knorr, Moritz +2 more
core +1 more source
Mikhail Semevsky and Fyodor Dostoevsky
The article presents the history of business and friendly relations between F. M. Dostoevsky and M. I. Semevsky, an employee of the “Vremya” journal and the editor of “Russkaya Starina”, the largest historical journal of the 19th century. Semevsky most likely met Dostoevsky in the early 1860s, when the former became a contributing author of the “Vremya”
openaire +1 more source
Specifics of Bildungsroman Structure in Protocanon Phase of Socialist Realism
The article examines the Soviet novels of the mid-1920s — early 1930s, gravitating towards the genre tradition of the Bildungsroman (D. Furmanov’s “Chapaev”, A. Fadeev’s “Razgrom”, N. Ognev’s “Diary of Kostya Ryabtsev”, A.
O. Yu. Osmukhina, E. P. Ovsyannikova
doaj +1 more source
As the survey by Nele Bemong and Pieter Borghart introducing this volume makes clear, the term chronotope has devolved into a veritable carnival of orismology.
Holquist, Michael
core
The Peril of Thinking for Others: The Russian Intelligentsia, Pro and Contra
The Russian Review, Volume 85, Issue 1, Page 93-97, January 2026.
Caryl Emerson
wiley +1 more source
The article is devoted to the comprehension of the “novel of the figure” as a special subtype of the Bildungsroman. The hypothesis of the study is to expand and deepen the ideas of M. Bakhtin and M.
O. Yu. Osmukhina, E. P. Ovsyannikova
doaj +1 more source
The purpose of this article is to analyze, from descriptions of situations and characters, devil's representation in the novels The Brothers Karamazov, by Fyodor Dostoevsky, and Doctor Faustus, by Thomas Mann.
Maria Cecilia Marks
doaj +1 more source
The Chronotope of Humanness : Bakhtin and Dostoevsky [PDF]
Bakhtin and Dostoevsky shared the conviction that human life must be understood in terms of temporality. Both thinkers were obsessed with time’s relation to life as people experience it.
Morson, Gary Saul
core
Eulogizing Realism : Documentary Chronotopes in Nineteenth-Century Prose Fiction [PDF]
In this contribution we try to probe the generic chronotope of realism, which, judging from its astonishing productivity in the nineteenth century and the profound impact it has had on literary evolution and theory ever since, can be designated nothing ...
Borghart, Pieter, Dobbeleer, Michel De
core

