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Dostoyevsky, Fyodor Mikhaylovich (1821-1881), Russian novelist, one of the greatest of all novelists, who penetrated the human mind and heart with exceptional insight and whose fiction has had profound influence on the modern intellectual climate. Born in Moscow on November 11, 1821, Dostoyevsky was the son of a former army doctor. He had a gloomy childhood. At the age of 17 he was sent to the military academy in St Petersburg. Technical studies bored him, and on graduation he decided to become a writer.
Dostoyevsky's first novel, Poor Folk (1846), the unhappy love story of a humble government clerk, was highly praised for its sympathetic treatment of poor people victimized by cruel circumstances. The book was innovative in that it added a psychological dimension to the narrative, looking at the hero's conflicts from within, and this found a sympathetic response with readers. In his next novel, The Double (1846), and in 13 other sketches and stories composed in the following three years, Dostoyevsky continued to explore the humiliations and consequent behaviour of the underprivileged. In 1849 Dostoyevsky's literary career was disastrously interrupted. He had joined a group of young intellectuals who read and debated French socialist theories forbidden to be openly discussed in tsarist Russia. A police informer slipped into their secret meetings, and the entire group was imprisoned. In December 1849, they were taken to a place of execution, presumably to be shot; at the last minute they were reprieved, and the punishment was changed to penal exile. Dostoyevsky was sentenced to four years of hard labour in Siberia and to serve afterwards as a common soldier. The stresses of this period brought on epilepsy, from which Dostoyevsky suffered the rest of his life.
In The House of the Dead (1861-1862), published in Vremya (“Time”), the journal he founded in 1861, Dostoyevsky described the sadistic beatings, the filthy conditions, and the total lack of privacy among the convicts, who treated him, “a gentleman”, with animosity. He also recorded the change in his spiritual and psychological outlook. His reading, limited to the Bible, led to the rejection of the Western-inspired atheistic socialism of his youth. Christ's teachings became for him the supreme affirmation of the ethical ideal and of the possibility of salvation through suffering. The brutality of the hardened criminals, alternating with displays of courage, generosity, and sensitive feelings, deepened the writer's insight into the complexity of human behaviour. Released from prison in 1854, Dostoyevsky was sent to a garrison town near Mongolia. Five years later he received permission to return to St Petersburg with a young, consumptive widow he had married. The marriage was not a happy one.
Resuming his literary career, Dostoyevsky launched with his brother, Mikhayl, a monthly periodical, Time. The House of the Dead was serialized in it, as was The Insulted and Injured (1861). In this melodramatic story, which delighted readers, a morbidly sympathetic treatment of the defenceless characters introduces Dostoyevsky's famous theme of redemption and happiness through suffering. His first trip abroad, a long-held ambition, was recorded in the essay “Winter Notes on Summer Impressions” (1863), which emphasizes the soullessness of Western European culture. When Time was suppressed because of a supposedly subversive article, the brothers started The Epoch, another short-lived review, in 1864. The beginning of Dostoyevsky's unique philosophical novel Notes from the Underground (1864) was published in the first issue. The work is considered the ideological prologue to Dostoyevsky's major fiction. In the self-lacerating monologue of the nameless narrator of Notes, a rebel against the materialism and conformity of society, Dostoyevsky presented, for the first time in the history of modern literature, the alienated anti-hero. After his wife's long illness and death in 1864, followed by that of his brother, whose financial obligations he assumed, Dostoyevsky was penniless. In return for a loan from an unscrupulous publisher, he agreed to forfeit permanently all copyrights if he did not deliver a new full-length novel by an early date. Two months before the deadline, he dictated The Gambler (1866), based on his own passion for roulette, to a young stenographer, Anna Snitkina. She soon afterwards became his wife, and this marriage was happy and fulfilling.
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