Book details
Crime and Punishment
by Fyodor Dostoevsky
1866 · Vintage
About the book
Rodion Raskolnikov, a destitute former student living in a cramped St. Petersburg Garrett, formulates a theory that superior individuals possess the right to bypass moral laws for a higher purpose. To test this hypothesis, he murders an unscrupulous pawnbroker with an axe, but the subsequent accidental killing of her sister shatters his composure. The narrative follows his mental unraveling as he evades the investigator Porfiry Petrovich, whose psychological tactics increase the pressure on Raskolnikov’s fractured conscience. His internal isolation only begins to crack through his interactions with Sonya, a young woman forced into prostitution who advocates for suffering as a means of atonement.
Classic literature enthusiasts and students of psychology read this work to examine the mechanics of guilt and the failure of nihilism. The reader gains a granular view of a mental breakdown and the specific ways rationalizations collapse under the weight of human empathy. By the end, the audience understands the conflict between intellectual arrogance and the necessity of social and spiritual connection. The book provides a detailed map of a criminal mind seeking a path back to humanity through confession.
Details
- Published
- 1866
- Publisher
- Vintage
- ISBN
- 9780307829603
- Language
- EN