Friday, November 29, 2019
Crime And Punishment Characterization Essays -
  Crime And Punishment: Characterization        In Dostoevsky's Crime and Punishment, Raskolnikov's dream about the  mare can be used as a vehicle to probe deep into his mentality to discover  how he really feels inside. The dream suggests that Raskolnikov is a  "split" man; after all, his name in Russian means "split". He has a cruel  and thoughtless side as well as a caring, compassionate side to his  personality. Through the dream and the symbols therein, a reader can cast  Raskolnikov, as well as other characters from Crime And Punishment, into  any of the various parts in the dream. Each part that a character takes on  leads to a different conclusion about that character. Raskolnikov himself  "fits" into the positions of Mikolka, the child, and the mare.      If Mikolka, the drunken owner of the mare, were to represent  Raskolnikov, then the mare would most probably represent Alyona Ivanovna.  The senseless beating of the mare by Mikolka is similar to the brutal  attack on Alyona by Rodion. (It should be noted that both Alyona and the  mare were female.) These heartless attacks foreshadow the crime that  Raskolnikov is contemplating. Dostoevsky unveils Raskolnikov's cruel side  during this dream, if it is to be interpreted in this way.      On the same token, Raskolnikov's compassionate side could be  represented by the little boy. The child, watching the beating, realizes  the absurdity of it. He even rushes to Mikolka, ready to punish him for  killing the mare. This illustrates Rodion's internal struggle while  contemplating the murder of Alyona. His humane side, the child, tells him  to live and let live. And his "extraordinary" side, according to his  definition, tells him that he should eliminate Alyona altogether, for the  good of man kind.      On the other side of the coin, Raskolnikov could be represented by the  mare itself. However, the burden which the mare must carry (the cart, the  people, etc.) could represent two separate things, depending on if it is  viewed in context before or after the actual murder. Before the murder,  the burden could represent the moral question that is plaguing Rodion.  Should he kill Alyona? Or should he leave her be? Because of the  importance of this question to Raskolnikov, it weighs him down heavily at  first. However, later on, he rashly decides to kill Alyona.      If looked upon after the murder, the load on the mare in the dream  could represent the mental burden placed on Rodion. He had a burden of  guilt on him, and he could not justify the murder according to his own  theory. Therefore, he was tormented by the otherwise insignificant  statements and actions of others in the novel. Even though Porfiry  Petrovitch did not have many of the people purposely harassing Raskolnikov  by mentioning various facets of the murder, it was as if those who were  "beating" the truth out of him were pawns of Porfiry (or that of truth and  the law in general), just as those beating the life out of the mare were  pawns of Mikolka (or that of cruelty). By this reasoning, a parallel may  also be drawn between the mare and Rodion.      This is not to say that the dream does not have other significances.  It is possible that Mikolka represents Porfiry also. Mikolka beat the mare  until it died; Porfiry beat Raskolnikov mentally until he confessed.  There are also other interpretations that can be made.      Despite other possible interpretations, Raskolnikov may be represented  by all three main characters in the dream: Mikolka, the child, and the  mare. Each representation brings to mind a new side of Rodion Romanovitch  that must be considered in order to understand him fully.    
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