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| | Dostoyevsky and the Problem of God |
 | | Dostoyevsky distinctly pairs his heroes with a strong faith in God and his villains with atheism (and socialism), suggesting the conclusion which he would like to draw. |  | | While Dostoyevsky examines his religious doubts, funneling his struggle into the voices of his characters, it is clear that his final resolve lies in a strong conviction of the presence of God. |  | | The primary source of doubt which plagued Dostoyevsky was his struggle to reconcile the suffering evident in the world and the notion of a loving God. |
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http://community.middlebury.edu/~beyer/courses/previous/ru351/studentpapers/God.shtml
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| | Fyodor Dostoyevsky - Free Online Library |
 | | The germ of all Dostoyevsky’s imaginative work may be discovered here. |  | | The story was submitted in manuscript to the Russian critic, Bielinski, and excited him by its power over the emotions. |  | | Raskolnikov finally gives himself up to the police and is exiled to Siberia, whither Sonia follows him. |
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http://dostoyevsky.thefreelibrary.com
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| | Fyodor Dostoevsky Biography |
 | | Dostoyevsky described his life as a prisoner in Zapiski iz myortvogo doma (1862; The House of the Dead), a novel demonstrating both an insight into the criminal mind and an understanding of the Russian lower classes. |  | | Dostoyevski's last work was Bratya Karamazovy (1880; The Brothers Karamazov), a family tragedy of epic proportions, which is viewed as one of the great novels of world literature. |  | | Dostoyevsky is considered one of the greatest writers in world literature. |
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http://people.brandeis.edu/~teuber/dostoevskybio.html
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| | MSN Encarta - Search View - Dostoyevsky |
 | | In Idiot (1868-1869; The Idiot) Dostoyevsky attempts to portray “a positively beautiful man.” His hero, Prince Myshkin, is a Christlike figure who becomes entangled in a complex love intrigue involving two women, Aglaya and Nastasya, who are drawn to his innocence and loving personality. |  | | Over the next three years Dostoyevsky published ten undistinguished short novels and stories that barely rise above the literary conventions of the day. |  | | Besy (1871-1872; Devils, also known as Demons or The Possessed) is Dostoyevsky’s most political novel. |
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http://encarta.msn.com/text_761553884__1/Dostoyevsky.html
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| | MILTON AND DOSTOYEVSKY |
 | | Dostoyevsky possessed the tortured soul of a doubter or of a saint. |  | | Unlike Milton, Dostoyevsky never put himself in his novels (yet he is there in every character), Milton expressed his opinions in his essays and poems. |  | | Dostoyevsky possessed the enigmatic character of the nineteenth century Russian writer. |
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http://members.cox.net/ramero/milton.htm
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| | Penguin Reading Guides Crime and Punishment Fyodor Dostoyevsky |
 | | Regardless of its origins, Dostoyevsky meant the novel to be as close to perfect as possible. |  | | Is Dostoyevsky interfering too much with the natural course of events in order to move his story along, or is he making a point about the randomness of life, free will, and divine intervention? |  | | This tale of a young clerk who falls haplessly in love with a woman he cannot possess led the literary lion Victor Belinsky to proclaim Dostoyevsky as the next Gogol. |
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http://www.penguinputnam.com/static/rguides/us/crime_and_punishment.html
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| | Othman |
 | | The argument was cogent, but the conclusion repugnant to what with all his heart he wished to believe, namely, that the world, for all its evil, is beautiful because it is the creation of God. |  | | Dostoyevsky never wrote with greater power than in this piece; but having written it, he was afraid of what he had done. |  | | He insists that there is no reason for the innocent to suffer for the sins of the guilty; and if they do, and they do, God either is evil or does not exist. |
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http://www.hkkk.fi/~korpela/harraste/essays/dosto_maugham-54.htm
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| | The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition: Dostoyevsky, Feodor Mikhailovich @ HighBeam Research |
 | | His powerful though generally humorless narrative style, his understanding of the intricacies of character, especially the pathological conscience, and his amplification of sin and redemption made him a giant among novelists and, in the realm of ideas, a precursor of Freudian psychological analysis. |  | | Both of these themes are central to the enormously complex plot and character development of his masterpiece, The Brothers Karamazov (1879-80), generally thought to be one of the finest novels ever written. |  | | Crime and Punishment, a brilliant portrait of sin, remorse, and redemption through sacrifice, followed in 1866. |
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http://www.highbeam.com/library/doc0.asp?DOCID=1E1:Dostoyev&refid=ip_encyclopedia_hf
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| | Radical Son |
 | | Dostoyevskys novel is a dark chronicle of the psychology that energized their terroristic brand of nihilism. |  | | This is meant to dramatize Dostoyevskys view of the Russian revolutionaries of his time, whom he saw as possessed by a desire to destroy and little else. |  | | As Dostoyevsky put it: Its all the work of four scoundrels, four and a half! A prophetic sentence, that. |
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http://amconmag.com/2005_02_28/article.html
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| | Christian History - Fyodor Dostoyevsky - 131 Christians Everyone Should Know |
 | | After dictating to her day and night for three weeks, he delivered the manuscript, titled The Gambler, to his publisher and was saved. |  | | This internal war between the believer and the skeptic waged within Dostoyevsky's soul his entire life, both theologically and morally. |  | | Though a devout Christian, he was never a good one; though a brilliant writer, his works remain technically unpolished. |
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http://www.christianitytoday.com/history/special/131christians/dostoyevsky.html
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| | Dostoyevsky's Gamble |
 | | Working under intense pressure, Dostoyevsky reaches into his past to dictate the story of the dashing, self-destructive Alexey Ivanovich and the beautiful, proud Polina Alexandrovna. |  | | Based on Anna’s memoirs of her marriage to the Russian writer, Dostoyevsky’s Gamble explores themes of imagination and truth, guilt and forgiveness, fear and love in a lively, intense, and often humorous two-act drama. |  | | Having fallen tens of thousands of rubles in debt, he had signed a contract requiring him to produce a new novel by November 1, 1866 or lose the publishing rights to all his works—past, present, and future—for the next nine years. |
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http://www.elmhurst.edu/~lancew/Writings/DG.htm
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| | Dostoyevsky |
 | | "Dostoyevsky and the Problem of God" by Elissa Kiskaddon |  | | Dostoyevsky's views on the The Devils (from Luis Greco) |  | | The Dream of a Ridiculous Man by Fyodor Dostoyevsky |
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http://www.mythosandlogos.com/Dostoyevsky.html
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| | Biography of Fyodor Dostoyevsky |
 | | Dostoyevsky produced some of his greatest works in the 1860s - notably 'Notes from the Underground' (1864), 'Crime and Punishment'(1865-66), 'The Gambler' (1866) and 'The Idiot' (1869). |  | | As a result he made a deal that he would write a book for a man called Stellovsky and receive 3000 roubles. |  | | He worked round the clock and engaged the services of a star pupil at shorthand school, Anna Grigoryevna Snitkina. |
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http://www.biogs.com/famous/dostoyevsky.html
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| | Dostoyevsky's Disregarded Prophecy - Christianity Today Magazine |
 | | Dostoyevsky's novels, including Crime and Punishment, The Idiot, The Brothers Karamazov, and Notes from Underground, are available from Amazon.com and other book retailers. |  | | Never inclined to moderation, Dostoyevsky slaps you in the face with dingy scenes of urban squalor and shady, depraved characters. |  | | Dostoyevsky's Christian faith, like his writing, bears the mark of tortured genius. |
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http://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2005/106/52.0.html
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| | Dostoyevsky vs. Dworkin |
 | | Dostoyevsky illustrates that postures cannot exist independent of each other, and that we should focus not only on individual postures, but on the relationships between them. |  | | Milan Kundera notes that Dostoyevsky was "a great thinker only as a novelist," not when he expounded his views like a philosopher in Diary of a Writer. |  | | Dostoyevsky has a dialogic relationship with his characters. |
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http://tarlton.law.utexas.edu/lpop/etext/solove.htm
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| | Search Results for Dostoyevsky - Encyclopædia Britannica |
 | | Dostoyevsky is best known for his novella Notes from the Underground and for four long novels, Crime and Punishment, The Idiot, The Possessed (also and more accurately known as The Demons and The... |  | | Washington State University, U.S. Compilation of English translations of Latin, French, or German words and phrases from Dostoyevsky's The Brothers Karamazov. |  | | Study guide on this work by Fyodor Dostoyevsky. |
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http://www.britannica.com/search?query=Dostoyevsky&submit=Find&source=MWTEXT
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| | dostoyevsky - Books, journals, articles @ The Questia Online Library |
 | | Dostoyevskys conversion by Rachel B. Shteir The Russian...an overabundance of dramatic riches Early on in Dostoyevskys novel The Devils, or The Possessed, Nikolai Stavrogin...visiting student slaps Stawogins face for a reason that Dostoyevsky momentarily leaves unexplained, in the tradition of... |  | | Dostoyevskys three tiers are evident in a work like The Demons... |  | | This event haunted Dostoyevsky all his life and perhaps accounts in part for the preoccupation... |
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http://www.questia.com/SM.qst?act=search&keywordsSearchType=1000&keywords=dostoyevsky
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| | New England Review: Tsypkin's Way with Dostoyevsky |
 | | This structure corresponds to the depictions of the Dostoyevskys in Dresden, then in Baden-Baden, and then Tsypkin in Leningrad, a pilgrim worshipping at the shrine (the Dostoyevsky museum) and confronting his guilty love. |  | | Coetzee is not at all interested in the biographical man, but the writer the man becomes on the track of a new hero and constellation of characters. |  | | For he saw himself in that despicable waiter, he with that cringing, mewling, fawning look and shuffling downcast gaze, satisfying the stockade commandant's appetite for lewdness. |
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http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qa3802/is_200304/ai_n9233459
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| | Amazon.com: The Brothers Karamazov: Books |
 | | In his most comprehensive (and not coincidentally, his final) masterpiece, Dostoyevsky addresses and discusses a number of the most fundamental and universal issues which face man. His multiple perspectives are embodied in seperate characters -- taken together, these characters form the whole of the Karamazov family, and these perspectives constitute the whole of Dostoyevsky's view. |  | | Instead, the work is a discussion and analysis of man's values and beliefs, and an affirmation of Dostoyevsky's fundamental conviction: that the presence of the human spirit cannot be denied without disastrous results, and that despite the assertions of the nihilists, God is a necessary element in the world of man. |  | | The Devils : The Possessed by Fyodor Dostoyevsky |
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http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0553212168?v=glance
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| | Amazon.ca: Books: Retelling Dostoyevsky: Literary Responses and Other Observations |
 | | The Dostoyevsky of the twentieth century is very different from the Dostoyevsky of the nineteenth. |  | | He has written books on Conrad, Hardy, Tolstoy, and D. Lawrence, as well as a novel and a chapbook of poems. |  | | Publisher: learn how customers can search inside this book. |
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http://www.amazon.ca/exec/obidos/ASIN/0838754732
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| | Biblio: Crime and Punishment (Signet Classics) by Dostoyevsky, Fyodor; Monas, Sidney (translator): Details |
 | | Dostoyevsky's penetrating novel of an intellectual whose moral compass goes haywire, and the detective who hunts him down for his terrible crime, is a stunning psychological portrait, a thriller and a profound meditation on guilt and retribution. |  | | Dostoyevsky, Fyodor; Monas, Sidney (translator): Crime and Punishment (Signet Classics) |  | | Biblio: Crime and Punishment (Signet Classics) by Dostoyevsky, Fyodor; Monas, Sidney (translator): Details |
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http://www.biblio.com/books/isbnnu/17646745.html
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| | Fyodor Dostoyevsky information |
 | | Dostoyevsky explores the right of a child to raise his hand against his father and, by extension, the right of man to raise his hand against God. |  | | He remained abroad until 1871 and there completed The Idiot (1868), the warmly ironic story of Prince Mishkin, a saintly epileptic, a man who is ineffectual because of his positive goodness. |  | | This is most clearly seen in the motif of the "underground hero," that is, the hero who is alienated from technology and the so-called advances of civilization. |
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http://www.geocities.com/paul_rim/dost_sum.htm
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| | TourArena - Dostoyevsky |
 | | Dostoyevsky would remember till his death the terrible suspense of sure death and represented the emotion in his novel “The Idiot”. |  | | He was afraid to lose the chance to make a writing career feasible only in the capital. |  | | However, it was not the city’s grandeur, like in the case of Pushkin, but the spiritual mystery of Saint-Petersburg that Dostoyevsky drew his inspiration from. |
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http://wwwru.tourarena.com/taeng.nsf/(vwSubSectionsByID)/F0001252BDAF9495C3256B2700497B6A
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| | Sunbirds.com: Fyodor Dostoyevsky -- Stories - Russian Lacquer item |
 | | This gave him instant success, and he began behaving himself as a famous writer, sometimes to the point of absurdity. |  | | Fyodor Dostoyevsky -- Stories by Dostoyevskiy F. of Literature #240709 |  | | Shortly thereafter, he began his literary career by translating various works from the French. |
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http://www.sunbirds.com/lacquer/box/240709
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| | Fyodor Dostoyevsky Trivia and Quizzes |
 | | Test your knowledge on this epic tale of murder, hatred, and the human spirit. |  | | Home : Directory : Literature : Authors D-G : Dostoyevsky, Fyodor |  | | How well do you know this extensive and extremely detailed masterpiece of murder and the consequences that come with it? |
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http://www.funtrivia.com/quizlistgold.cfm?cat=12467
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| | Temporal Lobe Epilepsy : Epilepsy.com |
 | | Dostoyevsky, the 19th-century Russian novelist, who himself had epilepsy, gave vivid accounts of apparent temporal lobe seizures in his novel The Idiot: |  | | Next moment something appeared to burst open before him: a wonderful inner light illuminated his soul. |  | | And of course it is even more difficult to get an accurate picture of what children are feeling. |
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http://www.epilepsy.com/epilepsy/epilepsy_temporallobe.html
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| | Powell's Books - The double by Fyodor Dostoyevsky |
 | | The Gambler (Dover Thrift Editions) by Fyodor Dostoyevsky |  | | Powell's Books - The double by Fyodor Dostoyevsky |  | | Read the Kids' QandA with pop-up artist Robert Sabuda, and save 30% on Winter's Tale |
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http://www.powells.com/cgi-bin/biblio?inkey=62-1592248942-0
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| | ABC News: Dostoyevsky's Great-Grandson Sues Lotter |
 | | Dostoyevsky, 59, says the use of the image of the author of such masterpieces as Crime and Punishment and The Brothers Karamazov, is unauthorized and insulting. |  | | The writer, who lived from 1821 to 1881 and is known for such works as "Crime and Punishment," "The Brothers Karamazov" and "The Idiot," battled the addiction for many years. |  | | "To use the addiction of the great writer, which he was struggling to overcome all his life, for commercial purposes is insulting not only for me as Dostoyevsky's descendant, but also for many other people who love to read his works," said Dostoyevsky, 59. |
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http://abcnews.go.com/International/wireStory?id=544725
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| | Dostoyevsky (1967) The gambler [and] Notes from underground |
 | | Russia; Social life and customs; Fiction; Dostoyevsky, Fyodor; Translations into English |  | | Printed at the Sign of the Stone Book for the members of the Limited Editions Club (Bloomfield, Conn) |  | | Dostoyevsky (1967) The gambler [and] Notes from underground |
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http://www.getcited.org/?PUB=101233449&showStat=Ratings
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| | Fyodor Dostoyevsky Biography, ebooks, Quotations (Dostoevsky) |
 | | An attempt has been made to provide both a resource for those already familiar with the great Russian master, as well as visitors who have the privilege of learning about him for the first time. |  | | Dostoyevsky lived here, his last apartment in St. Petersburg, between 1878 and 1881 and the flat is still filled with memorabilia relating to his life and work. |  | | Dostoyevsky based many of his stories and novels in St. Petersburg, especially in the Vladimirsky region of the city where his apartment is located. |
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http://www.fmdostoyevsky.com
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| | CNN.com - Dostoyevsky stories dramatized as bedroom farce - August 24, 2000 |
 | | WASHINGTON (AP) -- Americans may think of Fyodor Dostoyevsky as the prime novelist of Russian gloom and murder in the 1800s -- novels like "Crime and Punishment" and "The Brothers Karamazov" come to mind -- but the Classika Theater has found two of his short stories that could be made into bedroom farce. |  | | A czarist court condemned him to death, reprieved him and sent him to Siberia. |  | | The main character suspects his wife is cheating on him and gets into a series of comic situations, in one of which he finds himself under the bed of a different woman. |
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http://archives.cnn.com/2000/books/news/08/24/tragedians.comedy.ap
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| | The Idiot - Fyodor Dostoyevsky - Penguin Group (USA) |
 | | Inspired by an image of Christ’s suffering, Fyodor Dostoyevsky set out to portray “a truly beautiful soul” colliding with the brutal reality of contemporary society. |  | | A new translation of Dostoyevsky's great novel about the perils of innocence in a corrupt world |  | | Returning to St. Petersburg from a Swiss sanatorium, the gentle and naive Prince Myshkin—known as “the idiot”—pays a visit to his distant relative General Yepanchin and proceeds to charm the General and his circle. |
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http://www.penguinputnam.com/nf/Book/BookDisplay/0,,0_014044792X,00.html
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| | Fyodor Dostoyevsky at LiteratureClassics.com -- essays, resources |
 | | Four Novels for Online reading -- A particularly good format for comfortablly reading the text of four prominent Dostoyevsky novels on screen. |  | | The Brothers Karamazov, completed shortly before his death, is one of his masterpieces. |  | | Own thousands of works of classic literature for less than 3c a book: our Classics Digital Library CD is the intelligent way to read and interact with the classics. |
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http://www.literatureclassics.com/authors/Dostoyevsky
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| | Grand Inquisitor: Dostoyevsky, Fyodor |
 | | In the monologue of the nameless narrator of Notes, Dostoyevsky presented, for the first time in the history of modern literature, the |  | | Dostoyevsky's later novels are endowed with symbolic worlds where heroes, pervaded by the tragic sense of life, |  | | Dostoyevsky was sentenced to four years of hard labor in Siberia and to serve afterward as a common soldier. |
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http://www.piney.com/PrDostoy.html
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| | Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoyevsky |
 | | There is a simply marvelous story about the last days in the life of the famous Russian writer Fyodor Dostoyevsky by his faithful and loving wife Anna Grigorievna. |  | | On the night of January 25th 1881, Dostoyevsky experienced pulmonary bleeding. |  | | When the doctor began to listen to and tap the sick man’s chest, the bleeding began again and this time so strongly that Dostoyevsky lost consciousness. |
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http://www.fomacenter.ru/english/dost.htm
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| | Dostoyevsky: Inhale Slowly! |
 | | One hopes they will not follow in the footsteps of the Dostoyevsky Trip characters. |  | | Though it is a pity that they laughed during serious scenes from the real Dostoyevsky, and worse, during the scenes of withdrawal. |  | | "We believe that the new generation, through Sorokin’s adaptation and modernization will finally get through to the 'pure' Dostoyevsky, his genuine ideas and his famous ups and downs..." |
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http://cns.miis.edu/cres/dost.htm
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| | DOSTOEVSKY RESEARCH STATION: Table of Contents |
 | | Thanks to the Argus Clearinghouse for including us in their Literature Guide section. |  | | Dostoevsky Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoevsky Fyodor Dostoevsky Fyodor Dostoyevsky Fbedor Mikhailovitch Dostoievski Fiodor Dostoievski F. M Dostojevski Fjodor M. Dostojewskij Fyodor Dostoevsky Fedor Mikhafilovich Dostoevskifi F. Dostoevskifi Fedor Mikhafilovich Dostoevskifi Fjedor Michailowitsch Dostojewski Feideur Dusteuyafskei F. Dostoievsky Fjodor Mihaljovics Dosztojevszkij Fiodor Dostojewski Fedor Dostoevskij Fjodor Michajlowitsch Dostojewskij F. Dostojewskij F. Dostojevskij Fedor Dostoevskifi Fjodor Dostojevskij Ph. |
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http://www.kiosek.com/dostoevsky/contents.html
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| | Fydor Dostoyevsky's representation of suffering |
 | | You must realize, sir, that such blows not only fail to inflict pain, they are actually a pleasure." (Dostoyevsky, 34). |  | | If you sign up you could be reading the rest of this essay in under two minutes. |  | | Below is a short sample of the essay "Fydor Dostoyevsky's representation of suffering". |
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http://www.coursework.info/i/70395.html
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| | Dostoyevsky --Great Minds, Great Thinkers |
 | | Dostoyevsky was devastated by his wife's death in |  | | There, he attempted to rekindle a love affair with Apollinaria (Polina) Suslova, a young university student with whom he had had an affair several years prior, but she refused his marriage proposal. |  | | While not known for certain, it is believed that Mikhail Dostoyevsky was murdered by his own |
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http://www.edinformatics.com/great_thinkers/Dostoevsky.htm
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| | Dostoyevsky Biography - Fyodor Dostoyevsky |
 | | Dostoyevsky's education had begun early, as his parents spent a lot of time reading to their children, usually from books of weight and importance. |  | | Dostoyevsky and Isaev's love affair lasted through many trials, and they were eventually married in February of 1857, while Dostoyevsky was still in exile. |  | | His academic career led into his literary one, as he had started work on his first novel, ‘Poor Folks',while still attending school. |
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http://www.fmdostoyevsky.com/biography.php
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| | Study Guide for Dostoyevsky: Notes from Underground |
 | | Dostoyevsky enjoyed handicapping himself by placing some of his favorite arguments in the mouth of a character he despised. |  | | Fyodor Dostoyevsky, as the notes at the beginning and end of the story make clear. |  | | Such contradictions were not clearly understood in the nineteenth century, but Freud and modern psychology generally were to explore in depth the irrational bases of much human thought. |
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http://www.wsu.edu:8080/~brians/hum_303/underground.html
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| | Fyodor Dostoyevsky book reviews |
 | | Sometimes translated as "Letters From the Underworld," this short, two-part novella sprang the first existential modernist on the world in 1864. |  | | In Dostoyevski writings their seems to be a sence of struggle between prisonmates as well as... |  | | House of the dead is a excellent novel by Fydor Dostoyevsky. |
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http://www.allreaders.com/Topics/Topic_353.asp
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| | Fyodor Dostoevsky - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Dostoevsky wrote The Gambler simultaneously in order to satisfy an agreement with his publisher Stellovsky who, if he did not receive a new work, would have claimed the copyrights to all of Dostoyevsky's writing |  | | He had been left practically penniless after a gambling spree. |  | | Motivated by the dual wish to escape his creditors at home and to visit the casinos abroad, Dostoevsky traveled to Western Europe. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dostoyevsky
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| | Biblio: The Brothers Karamazov by Dostoyevsky, Fyodor: Details |
 | | All four sons, however, hate him, and the question of guilt is ambiguous. |  | | It has been theorized that Dostoyevski's hatred for his own father was the springboard for this examination of patricide and guilt. |  | | Note: Cover may not represent actual copy or condition available |
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http://www.biblio.com/books/isbnnu/30980404.html
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| | RIA Novosti - Culture - 20TH INTERNATIONAL DOSTOYEVSKY READINGS IN STARAYA RUSSA |
 | | The writer's great grandson Dmitry Dostoyevsky will mark his 60th birth anniversary during the readings. |  | | He spoke about the details of the arrests of Fyodor Dostoyevsky's grandson and nephew in 1934 and 1931. |  | | They will discuss reports on Dostoyevsky's books, new archive discoveries and biographic materials. |
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http://en.rian.ru/culture/20050521/40393879.html
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| | Fyodor Dostoevsky (Dostoyevsky) Crime and Punishment The Brothers Karamazov |
 | | Hounded by debt and creditors, Dostoyevsky struggled with his gambling addiction for much of his life. |  | | The great grandson of Russian writer Fyodor Dostoyevsky has sued Russia's nationwide sports lottery for using the author's image on lottery tickets. |  | | From time to time, students come on this site and post questions on the forum in various boards. |
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http://www.fyodordostoevsky.com
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