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Christina's avatar

As we're discussing Part 2, Chapter 6, I was reminded of a scene in Part 1, Chapter 6, where students are talking about crimes and murderm in a pub. They create theories on how things should be done. What do you think about this parallel? Perhaps the protagonist wants to return to that world, to that time before the murder, and behave as the students did?

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Ellie's avatar

I'm struggling a bit here. I've only ever read another Dostoevsky book before this, Notes from the Underground, I disliked it so much I wanted to throw it across my room. This chapter reminds me of Notes the most so far. Raskolnikov's mood swings seem narratively cheap and morally exhausting at this point, as do the various portraits of human misery and debauchery. I see that Dostoevsky was reacting to the rational egoism of his time, but his conclusions are soooo frustrating.

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