Friday, October 25, 2019
The Protagonist and Antagonist of Crime and Punishment :: Crime Punishment Essays
The Protagonist and Antagonist of Crime and Punishment     Ã     Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã   Crime and Punishment is considered by many to  be the first of     Fyodor Dostoevsky's great books.Ã   Crime and Punishment is a  psychological     account of a crime.Ã   The crime is double murder.Ã   A book about such  a broad     subject can be made powerful and appealing to our intellectual interests  if     there is a link between the reader, the action, and the characters.     Doestoevsky makes all these links at the right places.Ã   The action  takes     place between the protagonists and the antagonists.Ã   The  protagonists     include Dounia, the Marmeladovs, Sonia, Razumhin, Porfiry Petrovich, and     Nastaya.Ã   The antagonists of the story are Luzhin, Ilya Petrovich, and  the     landlady.Ã   Raskolnikov could be considered to be the primary  protagonist,     while Svidrigailov could be thought of as the primary antagonist.     Ã       Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã   In every story the protagonist is the  character that the reader     cares most about.Ã   In Crime and Punishment the reader cares about  Rodion     Raskolnikov.Ã   He is the primary and most significant character in the  novel.     We are introduced to this complex character in Part 1.Ã   We get to know  the     poverty stricken condition that he resides in, and we get to know his     family situation as we read the long letter from Raskolnikov's mother.     Then we witness the murder as it is graphically described by Doestoevsky.     After reading this graphic description of the murder, how can the reader  be     sympathetic towards Raskolnikov?Ã   How can the reader believe that a     murderer is the protagonist?Ã   It is, in fact,Ã   not hard to accept  this     murderer as the protagonist.Ã   Raskolnikov believed that by murdering  the     pawnbroker, he rid society of a pest.Ã   We realize that if the victim  would     have been someone other than an evil old pawnbroker the crime would never     had taken place.Ã   He could never have found the courage to kill an  innocent     person.Ã   It would not prove anything to him.Ã   So, Raskolnikov was  not a     criminal. He does not repent because he does not feel that he had sinned.     All he did was violate laws that were made by society.Ã   Raskolnikov     definition of crime was evil will in action.Ã   Raskolnikov knows that  he     possesses no evil will, and so he does not consider himself a criminal.Ã    He     is capable of justifying his crime.  					    
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