
Originally Posted by
mathieu_ory
in his youth Dostoyevsky was obsessed with Gogol and considered the book Dead Souls as one of the most well written compositions to the date. At that time, the gogolian universe represented the only term of comparison, at the highest level of creativity, in the russian literature. Dostoyevsky's The Double was considered a reply to Gogol's Dead Souls. The influence in his early works is obvious, but does anybody know any concrete examples in his mature writings that bear the influence of Gogol? (As far as my knowledge goes, the writings of Gogol are sprinkled with humor in a clean, liberating form, while in those of Dostoyevsky, when (rarely) the humor appears, it is clad in the form of irony, a thin layer that, when cracked, shows the tragic nature of the facts. Opinions on this last part would be much appreciated too.)