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Author Topic: The Life of a Great Sinner  (Read 1363 times)
Radarflea
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« on: July 26, 2010, 06:41:14 PM »

I absolutely love The Brothers Karamazov, and have been trying to find out about Dostoevsky's plans for The Life of a Great Sinner. There, unfortunately, is not much information readily available. My question is where I can learn about this unwritten work. Are there any books or published notebooks that detail what Dostoevsky's ideas were?  Has anybody here read anything pertaining to The Life of a Great Sinner?
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carnage_complex
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« Reply #1 on: January 28, 2011, 12:30:24 AM »

"The Life Of a Great Sinner" was one of two long novel ideas that Dostoevsky considered in 1869-1870, shortly prior to the writing of "Demons."  The other novel was supposed to be entitled "Atheism," though very little is known about it.  "The Life Of a Great Sinner" was supposed to be about a reprehensible character who spent his life in a state of relentless egoism and sin against God.  The book would have chronicled his life.  Supposedly, Dostoevsky meant for him to become penitent in adulthood and seek out refuge in a monastery.  In fact, there is considerable reason to believe that the character of Father Zosima from Karamazov may well have been a summation of this Sinner protagonist.  In fact, the protagonist of "tLOaGS" later took on a life of its own and became Stavrogin.  Dostoevsky estimated that Life would have rivalled Tolstoy's "War and Peace" in approximate length, and that it would have taken 4-5 years to write.  Given the fact that he was still in exile at that point and required funds to get back to Russia, support his young family/dependents, and pay down his debts, he probably had no resources to take on such a project.
« Last Edit: January 28, 2011, 12:41:05 AM by carnage_complex » Logged
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