Two Novels By Dostoevsky: Devils and The Idiot
These two novels, written one after the other in the late 1860s and early 1870s, are Fyodor Dostoevsky’s most emotional and riveting fiction. The Idiot tells the story of the saintly Prince Myshkin, a man too good for the world who is taken advantage of by the people around him. Far from being a fool, he is somebody who causes people to question their routine assumptions and values. Devils (also translated into English as The Possessed and Demons ) concerns the origins of modern revolutionary terrorism and its amorality and vindictiveness, seen especially in the predatory and menacing Nikolai Stavrogin. Both books feature some of the great comic creations (Lebedev in The Idiot , the senior Verkhovenesky in Demons ) in the entire history of the European novel. The sheer variety of character, incident, and feeling in these books vividly illuminates its cultural and historical context and becomes applicable to numerous other situations beyond the time and place in which the books were conceived.
You'll Walk Away with
- The ability to analyze the portrayal of morality and human nature in Dostoevsky's works
- Insight into the role of comedy in Dostoevsky's narrative technique
- An understanding of the historical and cultural context of 19th-century Russia
Ideal for
- Literature buffs
- The curious and creative
1 section
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Fall 2025
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Section
001 -
Semester
Fall 2025 -
Date
Oct 8 - Nov 19 -
Day
Wednesday -
Time
3:00PM-4:40PM -
Sessions
7 -
Faculty
TBA -
Location
Midtown Center
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