新闻 05月23日 15:45

Dostoyevsky's Crime and Punishment Drafts

The Russian State Library in Moscow made publicly available 94 pages of Dostoyevsky's working manuscripts for Crime and Punishment, composed between 1865-1866. These materials include early character sketches, abandoned plot directions, and extensive philosophical annotations that reveal Dostoyevsky's engagement with contemporary Russian radical thought and Christian theology. The drafts show Raskolnikov's motivation evolving through multiple conceptions—originally more politically motivated, gradually becoming a meditation on individual conscience and redemption. Marginalia reveals Dostoyevsky arguing with himself about philosophical questions, with different versions of key dialogues. Several pages contain Dostoyevsky's notes on real crime cases he'd researched, demonstrating his commitment to psychological authenticity. The manuscripts also reveal passages of extreme psychological exploration that he ultimately refined into the published novel's more controlled prose. Comparison of draft and published versions shows Dostoyevsky's process of distillation—removing explanatory passages to force readers into interpretive uncertainty. The collection includes letters to his editor Mikhailov discussing the novel's reception and future revisions.

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"你写作是为了改变世界。" — 詹姆斯·鲍德温