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White Nights

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  • 90 Seiten
  • 4 Lesestunden

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In the stories in this volume Dostoevsky explores both the figure of the dreamer divorced from reality and also his own ambiguous attitude to utopianism, themes central to many of his great novels. In White Nights the apparent idyll of the dreamer's romantic fantasies disguises profound loneliness and estrangement from 'living life'. Despite his sentimental friendship with Nastenka, his final withdrawal into the world of the imagination anticipates the retreat into the 'underground' of many of Dostoevsky's later intellectual heroes. A Gentle Creature and The Dream of a Ridiculous Man show how such withdrawal from reality can end in spiritual desolation and moral indifference and how, in Dostoevsky's view, the tragedy of the alienated individual can be resolved only by the rediscovery of a sense of compassion and responsibility towards fellow human beings.

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White Nights, Fyodor Dostoyevsky

Sprache
Erscheinungsdatum
2023
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7806 Bewertung

Eine sehr kurze, aber emotionale und schön geschriebene Geschichte. Wie es bei Dostojewski normal ist, sind die Dialoge häufig pathetische Monologwechsel, aber ein Buch fürs Herz und der Einstieg in die russische Weltliteratur

Sprache
Englisch
Erscheinungsdatum
2023
Einband
Paperback
Seitenzahl
90
ISBN10
939372461X
ISBN13
9789393724618
Reihe
Erstveröffentlichung
1848
Originaltitel
Sobranije sočinenij
Bewertung
4,05 von 5 Sternen
Beschreibung
In the stories in this volume Dostoevsky explores both the figure of the dreamer divorced from reality and also his own ambiguous attitude to utopianism, themes central to many of his great novels. In White Nights the apparent idyll of the dreamer's romantic fantasies disguises profound loneliness and estrangement from 'living life'. Despite his sentimental friendship with Nastenka, his final withdrawal into the world of the imagination anticipates the retreat into the 'underground' of many of Dostoevsky's later intellectual heroes. A Gentle Creature and The Dream of a Ridiculous Man show how such withdrawal from reality can end in spiritual desolation and moral indifference and how, in Dostoevsky's view, the tragedy of the alienated individual can be resolved only by the rediscovery of a sense of compassion and responsibility towards fellow human beings.