Fraејii Karamazov (1880) -
Fyodor is found murdered, and suspicion immediately falls on his eldest son, Dmitri , who was in a public dispute with his father over an inheritance and their shared obsession with the same woman, Grushenka .
Dostoevsky uses the brothers to represent the three aspects of the human condition: the body, the mind, and the spirit. Go to product viewer dialog for this item. FraЕЈii Karamazov (1880)
Published in as Fyodor Dostoevsky's final and most ambitious work, The Brothers Karamazov ( Frații Karamazov ) is a monumental synthesis of the author's lifelong struggle with the questions of God, morality, and the human soul. Often described as a "theological drama," the novel uses a gripping murder mystery to anchor deep philosophical explorations. The Core Conflict: The Murder of a Father Fyodor is found murdered, and suspicion immediately falls
The plot revolves around the fictional town of Skotoprigonyevsk and the volatile relationship between , a corrupt and lecherous patriarch, and his four sons. Published in as Fyodor Dostoevsky's final and most
The Brothers Karamazov: A Novel in Four Parts and an Epilogue [Book]
While Dmitri is convicted based on circumstantial evidence, the true murderer is revealed to be Smerdyakov , an illegitimate son and servant who acted upon the rationalist ideologies he heard from the middle brother, Ivan . The Brothers as Philosophical Archetypes


