Netotchka

by Dostoiévski
Publisher: Guimarães Editores, December of 2007 ‧

Netotchka

by Dostoiévski

Property Description
ISBN: 9789726652236
Publisher: Guimarães Editores
Release Date: December of 2007
Language: Portuguese
Dimensions: 119 x 185 x 8 mm
Cover: Softcover
Format: Book
Categories: Books in Portuguese > Fiction > Romance
EAN: 9789726652236

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Dostoiévski

Fyodor Dostoevsky (Moscow, 11.11.1821 - St. Petersburg, 09.02.1881) was one of the great precursors, like Emily Brontë, of the most modern form of the novel, exemplified in Marcel Proust, James Joyce, Virginia Woolf among others. The son of a military doctor, at the age of 15 he was sent to the Military School of Engineering. of St. Petersburg. There he awakened his literary vocation, when he came into contact with other Russian writers and with the work of Byron, Victor Hugo and Shakespeare. After finishing his engineering degree, he dedicated himself to making translations to earn a living and made his debut in 1846 with his first novel, Poor People. After a few more literary attempts, he was sentenced to death in 1849, for implication in a suspected revolutionary conspiracy. However, his sentence was commuted to hard labor in Siberia. During his years of exile he had an inner life of a mystical character, as he was forced to live with the harsh Russian reality, which also led him to become familiar with the unsuspected depths of the soul of the Russian people. Amnesty in 1855, he resumed his literary activity and in 1866, with Crime and Punishment, he marked the break with the liberals and radicals to which he had been connotated. Dostoevsky's works reach maximum prominence for their psychological analysis, especially of morbid conditions, and for the author's complete imaginative identification with the degraded characters he gave life to, having, from this point of view, no rival in world literature. The accuracy and scientific value of his portraits is attested to by the great Russian criminalists. In this great novelist, the desire to suffer brings as a consequence the search for and acceptance of punishment and the conception of punishment as redemptive through pain.

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