Etiket: Chernyshevsky

How does the difference between Chernyshevsky’s ideological character Rakhmetov and Dostoevsky’s tragic character Raskolnikov define the modern subject?

19th-century Russian novels offer a philosophical space for discussion regarding the formation of the modern subject. While Rakhmetov in Chernyshevsky’s *  What Is to Be Done?  * represents the rational, disciplined, and ideologically pure “new man,” Raskolnikov in Dostoevsky’s *  Crime and Punishment * reveals the fragmented, contradictory, and tragic nature of the modern individual. 1. Introduction: The Literary

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The Intellectual Struggle Between Crime and Punishment, Fathers and Sons, and What Is To Be Done?: Ideology, Violation, and the Design of Man in the Russian Novel

19th-century Russian literature is not only a field of aesthetic production but also a textual laboratory of political, philosophical, and ethical conflicts. Turgenev’s  Fathers and Sons , Chernyshevsky’s  What Is to Be Done?, and Dostoevsky’s  Crime and Punishment are among the most critical texts in this laboratory. This study examines these three novels as links in an ideological chain, investigating how

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