Daniel A. C.
06-17-2006, 01:39 PM
When I first read this book at a teenager, I agreed with a lot of critics that the epilogue was tacked on, and did not do justice to the intensity of Raskolnikov in the rest of the novel.
I thought perhaps it was Dostoevsky's attempt to add on a Christian ending, though the real truth of the novel was otherwise.
When I re-read it recently, my opinion was absolutely changed, and it struck me that maybe it is that the people who dislike the ending are those that basically share Raskolnikov's original philosophy.
Not that they condone murder, or are anywhere as extreme as Raskolnikov was, but that they basically have a materialist, utilitarian philosophy where the end justifies the means, that there is really not an innate value in every life, that reason, and ideology based on reason, trumps all.
I now see the epilogue as an organic part of the novel. The novel ended in a kind of intense cresendo, and in the aftermath Raskolnikov seems angry, perhaps beginning to renege on the renunciation of his former philosophy, until he has his dream of the virus, and the subsequent realization of Sonia as a way out of the mess his former ideology entailed.
This is how changes in outlook often happen, I think. We don't often logically re-assess our belief structures and sort everything out methodically. Rather, something from the subconscious shifts, as in Raskolnikov's dream and moment after seeing Sonya at the prision gates, and everything reorders on its own.
I thought perhaps it was Dostoevsky's attempt to add on a Christian ending, though the real truth of the novel was otherwise.
When I re-read it recently, my opinion was absolutely changed, and it struck me that maybe it is that the people who dislike the ending are those that basically share Raskolnikov's original philosophy.
Not that they condone murder, or are anywhere as extreme as Raskolnikov was, but that they basically have a materialist, utilitarian philosophy where the end justifies the means, that there is really not an innate value in every life, that reason, and ideology based on reason, trumps all.
I now see the epilogue as an organic part of the novel. The novel ended in a kind of intense cresendo, and in the aftermath Raskolnikov seems angry, perhaps beginning to renege on the renunciation of his former philosophy, until he has his dream of the virus, and the subsequent realization of Sonia as a way out of the mess his former ideology entailed.
This is how changes in outlook often happen, I think. We don't often logically re-assess our belief structures and sort everything out methodically. Rather, something from the subconscious shifts, as in Raskolnikov's dream and moment after seeing Sonya at the prision gates, and everything reorders on its own.