Tuesday, May 26, 2009

Camp life

So far in "Memoirs" we're dealing with Alexander Petrovich's initial impressions of life in the camp, and the people he encounters (up to "First Impressions III"). The way I see it, Dostoevsky is trying to illustrate an atmosphere of spiritual deadness (hence the title, I suppose). The tone of voice seems more matter-of-fact than shocking, despite the kind of people being described (for instance, a criminal who really enjoys killing little children). Is it supposed to convey a deeper message, or is this just Fyodor's own catharsis at work?

Dr. Jackson says "Memoirs" is nothing like the rest of Dostoevsky's work--being rather unfamiliar with it, I'm interested to see where this goes. 

The thing I'm having trouble with is the setting. I've read a lot of concentration camp narratives, but this seems like in entirely different kettle of fish. I've gotten, kind of, a better idea of what daily life in the camp was like from reading about the life of Father Arseny (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Father_Arseny), but as that's a good eighty years away, I'm still trying to find common ground. I might need to read up on the life and times, so to speak. 

Anyone else started this yet? Thoughts?

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