i think for sure its possible Dostoevsky could write pro-family themes into his stories as a response to Marxist thought, but I don't see the brief interaction between raz and raskols family as necessarily being evidence of that. if we want to make that argument, there would have be a lot more of the remainder of the story grounded in and around his mother and sister. and maybe not even then---raz's interaction can easily be viewed as a one-off, and raskols having them in his life is just a normal matter of course; family has been important ever since theres been family, so families appear in stories. their presence just as easily could have been written at any time period in history regardless of what social-political movements were afoot.
I just finished chapter 3 in part III, and it ends with a little hook of dounia and her mother saying they want raskol to appear that evening, even after luzhin tells them to not. brava!


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