Die Dämonen

by Fyodor Dostoyevsky

Blurb

“What I am writing now is a tendentious thing,” Dostoyevsky wrote to a friend in connection with his first outline for The Devils. “I feel like saying everything as passionately as possible. (Let the nihilists and the Westerners scream that I am reactionary!) To hell with them. I shall say everything to the last word.”

As Dostoyevsky predicted, The Devils, or The Possessed, was indeed denounced by radical critics as the work of a reactionary renegade. But radicals aside, it enjoyed great success both for its literary power and for its explicit and provocative politics; and for its story of Russian terrorists plotting violence and destruction, only to murder one of their own number.

“Stavrogin’s Confession”, the section omitted when the novel first appeared, is included as an appendix to this volume.

First Published

1872

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KlauDa

Klauda

Die Dämonen ist vielleicht sein wichtigster Roman. Dostojewski stand kurz vor der Hinrichtung als Revolutionär, wurde begnadigt zum sibirischen Exil. Er kannte also sehr gut dieses Milieu, das der Nihilisten, und zerpflückt es in den Dämonen schonungslos. Er zeigt sehr schön, dass extremistische Weltverbesserer sehr leicht zu Weltzerstörern werden können. Wäre der Roman im auslaufenden 19. Jahrhundert in Russland auf dem Schulplan gestanden, wäre die kriminelle Clique der Bolshewiki nie an die Macht gekommen.

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