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ISBNs | 978-5-04-110593-8 |
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The weight | 0,568 kg |
Size | 125 × 200 mm |
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Delivery
€9,99
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Prince Myshkin, the protagonist of F. M. Dostoevsky's famous novel The Idiot, preaches compassion, forgiveness, mercy and brotherhood to people. However, his hopes are dashed: his "godbrother" Rogozhin becomes a killer, "beauty" Nastasya Filippovna perishes... Such rich plots are always "doomed" to evoke an automatic effect of presence in the reader. The secret is not only and not so much in the twists and turns of events, but in the superbly drawn characters and the electrical discharges between them. The sum of all the terms is the transformation of the effect of presence into the “effect of complicity”: plunging into the novel, you first become an invisible witness to events, and then get along with the main character so firmly that you look through his eyes and measure his world with the beating of your own heart. And then the main question arises: how to survive in this world that seemed fictional and suddenly became so real, and how not to go crazy here. After all, can society determine the extent of someone's "normality"? In general, which of us is Prince Myshkin?