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The Brothers Karamazov Revisited


Article # : 18112 

Section : BOOK WORLD
Issue Date : 11 / 1990  4,631 Words
Author : Robert L. Busch
Robert L. Busch is professor of Russian literature at the University of Alberta. He has published numerous articles on nineteenth- and twentieth-century Russian literature. He is the author of Humor in the Major Novels of F.M. Dostoevsky (1988).

       THE BROTHERS KARAMAZOV
       F.M. Dostoevsky, translated by Richard Pevear and Larissa Volokonsky
       San Francisco: North Point Press, 1990
       793 pp., $29.95
       
        Fyodor Dostoevsky would appear on almost anyone's top-ten list of Russian authors, and his classic, the Brothers Karamazov, certainly belongs near the top of any list of Russian novels. Notable dissenters to this lofty view of Dostoevsky are Vladimir Nabokov and a host of twentieth-century civic-minded critics and Soviet literary ideologues who, under the rule of Stalin, managed a virtual ban on Dostoevsky's important fiction because it so consistently and powerfully challenged their core ideas. Nabokov, whose strong opinions are legendary, if not always defensible, found Dostoevsky wanting aesthetically, and purportedly dismissed him punningly as a "dusty gothic novelist." The civic-minded set and the Soviet ideologues were fundamentally put off by Dostoevsky's powerful opposition to the idea of man's perfectibility in a properly engineered society. Dostoevsky has very justifiably triumphed over those who would dismiss him - be it on aesthetic or civic grounds.
       
        Though the immensely talented and sophisticated Nabokov was worlds removed from the values of Dostoevsky's civic detractors, the two sides end up as strange bedfellows when it comes to aesthetics. Dostoevsky did have a pronounced neogothic streak. His works often suggest the otherworldly and dwell on man's shadow side, his capacity for crime and perversion, his stubborn refusal to adhere to the laws of reason and common sense. What for Nabokov was an unacceptable bondage to the ... (1997 of 28694 Characters)
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