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Arts & Ideas

Dostoevsky

Arts & Ideas

BBC

Society & Culture

4.2 β€’ 599 Ratings

πŸ—“οΈ 6 January 2021

⏱️ 45 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

From exile in Siberia to the novels which set a template - Rana Mitter and his guests Alex Christofi, Muireann Maguire, Claire Whiteheadand Viv Groskop look at the life and writing of Fyodor Dostoevsky (11 November 1821 – 27 January 1881).

Crime and Punishment published in 1886 was the second novel following Dostoevsky's return from ten years of exile in Siberia. It examined ideas about rationality, morality and individualism which Dostoevsky also examined in Notes from the Underground in 1864 - sometimes called the first existentialist novel. In his career he published 12 novels, four novellas, 16 short stories, and numerous other pieces of writing.

Alex Christofi's new biography out at the end of January is called Dostoevsky in Love: An Intimate Life Dr Muireann Maguire is Senior Lecturer in Russian at the University of Exeter. She has published a collection of Russian 20th-century ghost stories, Red Spectres and Stalin's Ghosts: Gothic Themes in early Soviet literature and is working on a project called RusTRANS: The Dark Side of Translation: 20th and 21st Century Translation from Russian as a Political Phenomenon in the UK, Ireland, and the USA Claire Whitehead is a Reader in Russian Literature at the University of St Andrews and has written The Poetics of Early Russian Crime Fiction, 1860-1917: Deciphering Tales of Detection and is working on a project with an author illustrator https://www.st-andrews.ac.uk/~lostdetectives/ Viv Groskop is a comedian and writer whose 2018 book The Anna Karenina Fix is a bestseller in Russia

In the Free Thinking archives you can find conversations about Russia and Fear https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m0006fl6 Soviet history featuring the authors Svetlana Alexievich and Stephen Kotkin https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b09d3q93 Tarkovsky's 1979 film Stalker hears research into tourism in Chernobyl https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b0775023 Cundill Prize winning historian Daniel Beer, Masha Gessen and Mary Dejevsky consider Totalitarianism and Punishment https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b09h659t

Producer: Luke Mulhall

Transcript

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0:00.0

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it. It's a long time ago, right? It's like the podcast version of telling your kids the ice cream

0:26.1

van plays music when it's out of ice cream. Listen to evil genius on BBC Sounds.

0:33.3

BBC Sounds, music, Radio, podcasts.

0:38.8

Hello.

0:42.4

That jingling you can hear is Chains in Siberia,

0:46.6

attached to the greatest jailbird novelist and mystical thinker in modern writing,

0:48.2

Fyodor Dostoevsky.

0:51.3

In a few minutes, we'll discover what made him so distinct, but in a way that you'll never have known before.

0:56.0

Yes, Dostoevsky,

1:05.5

thriller writer and comedian. Intrigued. More on that after this word. With the BBC Sounds app,

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you can find some of your favourite shows with ease. For example, you can tap the search button at the bottom right and type in Classical Fix.

1:19.0

This will take you straight to the podcast where we aim to open up the incredible world of classical music to everyone, featuring some famous faces, including the comedian James Acaster.

1:24.8

Listen to it, it feels like all the grimes coming off you.

1:28.0

The musician, Nadine Shah.

1:29.6

Right now I'm on some adventure.

1:31.9

And many more.

1:33.3

Download the BBC Sounds app to start listening to Classical Fix and many other podcasts.

1:40.3

Hello.

1:41.3

And in an era when we've all been locked away, here's a taste of someone getting released.

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Janacek's opera from the House of the Dead, and the convict at the heart of it was based on the

2:02.1

memories of a real-life jailbird, a man sentenced to death for rebellion against the state, let

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