Dostoevsky's Spiritual Art: The Burden of VisionTransaction Publishers - 216 sivua Fyodor Dostoevsky's highest and most permanent achievement as a novelist lies in his exploration of man's religious complex, his world and his fate. His primary vision is to be found in his last five novels: Crime and Punishment, The Idiot, The Devils, A Raw Youth, and The Brothers Karamazov. This volume culminates twenty years of studying, teaching, and writing on Dostoevsky. Here George A. Panichas critically analyzes the religious themes and meanings of the author's major works. Focusing on the pervasive spiritual consciousness at play, Panichas views Dostoevsky not as a religious doctrinaire, but as a visionary whose five great novels constitute a sequential meditation on man's human and superhuman destiny. |
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... Human pride and egoism are certainly not lim- ited to the past few centuries , yet , as Panichas traces some of the major themes of the novels , Dostoevsky found the modern world as he experienced it in the nineteenth century to be ...
... human soul , and an " especial need to keep alive the older religious tradition and metaphysics , which are being blotted out by the empirical ethos . " The critic's role is to witness , to clarify , and to preserve the prophet's vision ...
... human soul , in ev- ery human soul and every human ego , and that evil cannot be overcome by force or revolutionary changes in society but only by a conversion of the heart . At the core of Dostoevsky's prophetic vision is the wres ...
... human unhappiness , believed in 1862 that genuine fraternity required that the / give up being demanding and rebellious and offer up its rights " unconditionally to society , " without rational calculations of self - interest , but his ...
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Dostoevsky's Spiritual Art: The Burden of Vision George Andrew Panichas Esikatselu ei käytettävissä - 1985 |