Author(s): Joe E. Barnhart
Edition: 1
Publisher: University Press of America
Year: 2005
Language: English
Pages: 271
City: Lanham etc.
Table of Contents......Page 6
Preface and Acknowledgements......Page 8
Joe Barnhart. Introduction: Hearing Voices......Page 10
Ralph C. Woo. Dostoevsky on Evil as a Perversion of Personhood: A Reading of Ivan Karamazov and the Grand Inquisitor......Page 22
Dan R. Stiveer. Still Too High a Price? Ivan's Question in the Light of Contemporary Theodicy.......Page 46
Aaron Taylor. Encountering the Incarnate Subject: Dostoevsky’s Fiction As an Embodiment of and Contribution to Orthodox Theology......Page 62
Joe Barhnart. Dostoevsky and the Historical Christ......Page 98
Linda Kraeger. Dostoevsky and Alienation......Page 112
Ignat Avsey. The Karamazovs: A Paradigm in Dysfunctionality......Page 126
Joseph D. Stamey. Son and Fathers: The Character of Dominant Ideas and the Ideas of Dominant Characters in A Raw Youth......Page 152
Joe Barnhart. Contracts with Fate: Dostoevsky’s Characters......Page 164
Ignat Avsey. The Village of Stepanchikovo or "There’s a man with no clothes on!"......Page 174
Victor Terras. Fyodor Dostoevsky’s Notes from Underground......Page 194
James M. McLachlan. Schelling, Dostoevsky, and Chernychevsky: Egoism, Freedom and Madness in Notes From Underground......Page 206
Victor Terras. The French and the Russian Underground Man: Dostoevsky and Montherplant......Page 226
Stephen Souris. “Living at Double Intensity”: Dialogized Consciousness, the Question of Satire, and the Ethics of Representation in Dostoyevsky’s Poor Folk......Page 240
Ignat Avsey. The Translator’s Tale in the Bible and Dostoevskyland......Page 258
Brief Biographies of the Authors......Page 268