Analysis of Self-Sacrifice in Part One, Chapter III – IV

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Crime and Punishment, written by Fyodor Dostoyevsky, establishes his motifs through the use of. This novel reinstates the motif of self-sacrifice into different characters that interact with the main character, Raskolnikov. Although the largest case of self-sacrifice lies in the character of Sonya which is not thoroughly discussed in Chapter III and IV of Part One, pages 35 to 64 contributes the largest variety of self-sacrifice that is found within Crime and Punishment. Here, self-sacrifice comes in three different forms: the sacrifice of ones own body, the sacrifice of someone you love, and the sacrifice for someone you love. The slight contrast between the three situations allow for a greater understanding of this motif. In Crime and Punishment, the motif of self-sacrifice is established through the characterization of Dunya and Raskolnikov’s mother in the letter and his encounters with a potential young prostitute.

In Chapter IV, Raskolnikov encounters a young girl that represents the motif of self-sacrifice through her potential of becoming a prostitute. Raskolnikov first encounters the girl on page 57, when the sight of an older man pursuing her interrupts his thoughts of his mother’s recent letter. He observes the girl and finds her current state peculiar. Established through imagery, the desolate state of the young girl is described as “wearing a little silk dress of thin material, but she had it on in a very odd manner with hardly any of its fasteners done, and in behind, just where the skirt began, at her waist, it was torn; a whole piece of material had come away and hung loose” (57). The ‘torn skirt’ gives a typical image of what young women and girls looked like in brothels in third-world countries.

Raskolnikov’...

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...v believes that “… [Dunya’s] selling herself for her brother, for her mother! (54)”.

There is a contrast between Dunya’s situation and the young drunken girl that Raskolnikov encountered towards the end of chapter IV. Although Dunya’s situation is not as drastic or imminent as the young girl’s situation, this is still considered to be a form of prostitution because she is sacrificing herself for a man that even relates business to marriage proposals, when “…he very politely made his proposal, asking for a swift and definite reply.” If love or respect was situated into Luzhin and Dunya’s relationship, then the circumstance would be different and it could no longer be compared to prostitution because the marriage would give her happiness, as well.

Works Cited
Dostoyevsky, Fyodor. Crime and Punishment (Penguin Classics). New York: Penguin Classics, 2002. Print.

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