The Grand Inquisitor: With Related Chapters from The Brothers KaramazovHackett Publishing, 1993 M01 1 - 80 pages This new edition presents The Grand Inquisitor together with the preceding chapter, Rebellion, and the extended reply offered by Dostoevsky in the following sections, entitled The Russian Monk. By showing how Dostoevsky frames the Grand Inquisitor story in the wider context of the novel, this edition captures the subtlety and power of Dostoevsky's critique of modernity as well as his alternative vision of human fulfillment. |
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The Grand Inquisitor: with related chapters from The Brothers Karamazov Fyodor Dostoevsky Limited preview - 1993 |
Common terms and phrases
accept Alyosha asked atheist auto da fé beast become believe blood bread Brothers Karamazov child Christ Christianity Church confess CONSTANCE GARNETT creature cried dear desire Dmitri Dostoevsky dream earth earthly egoism Enlightenment everything existential eyes face faith Fathers and teachers feeling forgive free love freedom God's Grand Inquisitor story hands happiness harmony heart heaven human idea ideals innocent Ivan's stance Jesuits Katrina kiss laceration live look Lord Ludwig Wittgenstein Martin Heidegger Mikhail Bakhtin miracle mother motivated murder mystery never novel once one's pass peasant perhaps pray primal evil prison Protestant Reformation questions Rebellion reformers rejected remember response Russian Monk sensual serfdom servants sins smiled sobornost speak spirit suddenly suffering talk tears tell Thee things Thou didst Thou hast thought told tortured tower of Babel truth understand weep whole words Zossima