How Does Raskolnikov Deal With Suffering

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Suffering is inevitable to life. Since the beginning of time, humans have tried to find ways to cope with suffering. Being born in nineteenth century Russia, Fyodor Dostoevsky put up with more suffering than we could even imagine today. Poverty and social upheaval were a daily challenge for people at this time. Determined to let the suffering be known, Dostoevsky adds it to his novel Crime and Punishment. In the beginning, we are introduced to Raskolnikov, a college dropout who is poverty stricken. He gets to the point where he murders an elderly pawnbroker because he thought that it would benefit him financially and all humanity. Throughout the novel, Raskolnikov is fighting an “internal” battle and struggles with his emotions. Through the characters Raskolnikov encounters, Dostoevsky shows us many types of people and how they deal with their daily suffering. All these characters together mirror Dostoevsky’s view on the necessity of suffering and how embracing the suffering ultimately allows a person to redeem themselves.
When faced with suffering, most people will do …show more content…

On one hand, he thinks he is “extraordinary” and shouldn’t feel guilt, as the woman was just a “louse” to society. On the other hand, he struggles with feelings of helplessness and that he should confess his murder to the authorities. Earlier he attempted to resist suffering, but in the end, he discovers that the only way to get rid of the guilt is to embrace the punishment. To make himself feel better about murdering the pawnbroker, he comes up with a theory about “extraordinary” people. These “extraordinary” men have the ability to ignore common laws of morality. In order for someone to be “extraordinary”, they have to have the ability to not allow their conscience to get in the way (Dostoevsky 258-261). Once he is out of the clear, his conscience tears him apart from the grief, which makes him not an “extraordinary”

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