Dostoevsky's Spiritual Art: The Burden of VisionTransaction Publishers - 216 pages 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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... infinite with its own limited power . A related internal tension of modernity , which is , of course , not so much a time period as a state of consciousness , is that while it has succumbed to a comfortable nihilism , modernity is also ...
... attempting to transform the finite into the infinite . The re- fusal to surrender to God does not in the least alter the struc- ture of reality . Raskolnikov attempted to prove his metaphysi- xvi / DOSTOEVSKY'S SPIRITUAL ART.
... Infinite and Nothing , " as Pascal phrases it . For Dostoevsky the true measure of suffering is found in this entrapment . The religious situation is one of crisis . Necessarily , then , Dostoevsky's religious metaphysics , subject as ...
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Dostoevsky's Spiritual Art: The Burden of Vision George Andrew Panichas Aucun aperçu disponible - 1985 |