ragastudio

Tagged: #literature

· 4 min read

The Giants of Russian Literature You Should Actually Read

Dostoevsky, Tolstoy, Chekhov, Bulgakov — a no-nonsense guide to the most powerful writing tradition in history.

literature books culture
· 4 min read

The Epilogue Problem: Does Crime and Punishment Have a Bad Ending?

Readers and critics have debated for 160 years whether Dostoevsky's ending is redemption or propaganda. Here's the case for both sides.

literature dostoevsky russian-classics
· 3 min read

Svidrigailov's Ghosts: The Man Who Crossed Every Line

Raskolnikov's dark mirror — a man who actually became the extraordinary man, and found only emptiness.

literature dostoevsky philosophy
· 3 min read

How to Read Crime and Punishment: A Practical Guide

Which translation to pick, how fast to read, what to look for — everything you need before starting Dostoevsky's masterpiece.

literature dostoevsky books
· 3 min read

St. Petersburg as a Character: The Sick City of Crime and Punishment

Heat, stench, yellow walls, and narrow stairs — how Dostoevsky turned a city into a psychological weapon.

literature dostoevsky russian-classics
· 3 min read

Вместо диалектики наступила жизнь: The Line That Ends All Arguments

One sentence from the epilogue of Crime and Punishment that contains Dostoevsky's entire philosophy — in Russian, with full analysis.

literature dostoevsky philosophy
· 3 min read

Sonya Marmeladova: The Saint Who Refuses to Judge

A prostitute reads the Bible to a murderer. Why this scene is the spiritual heart of Crime and Punishment.

literature dostoevsky russian-classics
· 3 min read

Porfiry Petrovich: The Detective Who Never Needed Evidence

How Dostoevsky invented the psychological detective story 120 years before Columbo.

literature dostoevsky russian-classics
· 3 min read

The Extraordinary Man Theory: Raskolnikov's Dangerous Idea

Napoleon, lice, and the right to kill — dissecting the philosophical core of Crime and Punishment.

literature dostoevsky philosophy
· 3 min read

The Horse Dream: Dostoevsky's Most Disturbing Chapter

A child watches a horse beaten to death. Why this nightmare is the moral center of Crime and Punishment.

literature dostoevsky russian-classics
· 3 min read

Poverty Is Not a Vice: Marmeladov's Confession in Crime and Punishment

The devastating tavern monologue that defines what it means to be crushed — not by poverty, but by nothingness.

literature dostoevsky russian-classics
· 3 min read

Crime and Punishment: The Opening That Changed Literature Forever

How Dostoevsky's first paragraph plunges you into the mind of a murderer — and why it still feels disturbingly modern.

literature dostoevsky russian-classics