Characters
Karamazovs
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Fyodor Petrovitch Karamazov – Father and victim
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Dmitri (Mitya) Karamazov – Eldest son and the romantic
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Ivan Fyodorovich Karamazov – Middle son and the academic/thinker
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Aleksey (Alyosha) Karamazov – Youngest son, the spiritual one and the “hero of the story”
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Pavel Fyodorovich Smerdyakov – Bastard son between Fyodor Karamazov and a homeless woman Lizaveta, manservant to the Karamazov family
Others
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Father Zosima – Monk who was the spiritual guidance to Alyosha
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Mikhail Osipovic Rakitin – Alyoshas (apparent) friend who is a seminary student too but doesn’t really believe in it
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Katerina Khokhlakov – Rich woman in the area
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Liza Khokhlakov – Daughter of Katerina
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Grushenka – Seductress of Fyodor and Mitya
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Katerina Ivanovna – Wife of Mitya
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Ippolit Kirillovic – Public Prosecutor against Mitya
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Nikolay Parfenovic Nelyudov – State investigator, conducted interrogations with public prosecutor
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Pyotr Illyic Perkhotin – Civil servant that informed chief of police of the potential murder
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Grigory – Manservant and serving father or Smerdyakov, nearly gets killed by Mitya
Themes
Family
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Being a father is more than biological
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You must earn the love of your sons and daughters
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Is a father that kills his son really a father?
Freedom
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Fyodor lives in public view, not constrained to secrecy by his debauchery
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Freedom vs Religion
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God takes away a man’s freedom
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Guilt & Punishment
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May a son harm his father?
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True guilt/punishment originates from one’s own conscience
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Religion and the “law of Christ”
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Internal guilt is a much stronger force to the crimilal than external guilt (ie. The law)
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The true punishment of a crime is not the legal sentence, but the inner suffering one feels at having done wrong
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This is something that god makes you feel
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Book 6, chapter 2 – The man who gets away with murder
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Active punishment is rebelled against by criminals intentionally
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Their crime is not a crime to them
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Good vs Evil
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Legal ≠ Right
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Illegal ≠ Wrong
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The law does not define what is right and what is wrong
Depravity
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Dostoyevsky’s heroes are never rich, famous and well bred. They are depraved and live in the gutter of society
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Mitya – “I am a scoundrel, but not a theif”
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“I loved the shame of depravity, I loved cruelty, in a word: a Karamazov”
Religion
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Book 5, Chapter 5: The Grand Inquisitor
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Book 11, Chapter 9: The Devil of Ivans Nightmare
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Elder Zosima
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Religion gives many people a reason to live
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“Man needs someone to bow down to”
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“The secret of human existence does not consist in living, merely, but in what one lives for” – The theorist vs God conversation (Ivans Poema)
Quotes
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“Everyone has a duty to love life above all else in the world” – Alyosha
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“There is nothing more seductive for a man than the freedom of his conscience, but there is nothing more tormenting either”
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“It is precisely those crimes committed with uncommon boldness that are the most frequently successful”
Storyline
Mitya
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The first Mokroye bender
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Went on a massive drinking spree with Grushenka
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Used money that Katerina Ivanovna gave him
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Went back to Katerina Ivanovna afterwards, acknowledging himself as a scoundrel
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Says he only spent £1500, keeping the rest in a necklace/incense bag
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Falls for Grushenka, confessing this love to Alyosha
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Discovers his father is also involved with Grushenka, beats him (violently, at his house) up about this
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Finds out Grushenka is in Mokroye again, with her past (and first) lover
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Goes to his fathers, then injures Grigory as he is running away over the fence
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Gets £3000 from somewhere and runs off to Mokroye
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Parties hard in Mokroye
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Arrested for murder of his father
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The trial
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Guilty
Alyosha
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Begins the book furthering his spiritual development at the monastery with Elder Zosima
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Written his diary which tells of the stories of elder Zosima
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Elder Zosima tells him he should go out into the world and live a bit before dedicating himself to the monastery
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He goes out to do so, and encounters Ilyusha, the child of a beared “second grade captain” who was assaulted at a pub by Mitya
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Ilyusha bites his finger badly
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Alyosha goes to the “second rate captain” to offer him some money for the trouble and embarrassment Mitya caused
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He promises to marry Liza
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He chats to Ivan in a pub, who performs his little poema “the grand inquisitor”
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Zosima dies
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Mitya’s story takes over
Ivan
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The intellectual of the three brothers
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Is in love with Katya
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His explanation at Fyodor’s house of how anything is lawful without a god, rendering men free
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Conversations with Smerdyakov – “It is always interesting to talk to a clever man”
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Leaves the town during the time the murder happens
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Hallucinations and his conversations with the devil
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Talks to Smerdyakov three times, on the third visit Smerdyakov confesses all to him and then kills himself
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Testifies in the trial that Smerdyakov was the murderer, but nobody believes him because the doctors have said that he is not in his right mind
Random Quotes
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“if god did not exist, it would be necessary to invent him”
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Liza when talking about mitya murdering his father: “they all like it. They all say it’s dreadful but secretly they like it very much”
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Rakitin talking to Mitya:
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Chapter: “a hymn and a secret”
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rakitin proposes a chemical argument for why mitya murdered his father (if he did)
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he renounces God in the process
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mitya: “without God, and without a life to come, that must mean that all things are lawful and man can do whatever he likes?!”
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Smerdyakov and Ivan
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“It’s always interesting to talk to a clever man”
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“Who does not desire the death of his father?”
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“If you shall condemn, then I myself shall break the sword over my head, and having broken it, shall kiss the fragments”