pentangle
kiwifarms.net
- Joined
- Jan 17, 2024
I read this months ago but can't stop thinking about it because I'm such a shameless Ivan/Katerina. Here are some questions:
1) (Betrayal and selfless love) Dostoevsky seems to imply that Alyosha's love for Dmitri (and everyone) is ideal or better than the kind of self abnegating simp love Katerina provides, since I guess the latter is controlling in ways the former isn't. But isn't her response kind of reasonable given that she's betrothed to Dmitri? Her position's more entangled and emotionally and socially vulnerable than Alyosha's - since she's Dmitris' fiancee she presumably has a stake in his choices, so rationally she'd need to be controlling if he can't control himself. When he does retarded shit and betrays her it directly impacts her, while Alyosha can sort of just stand outside the prison and drop some encouraging words. How would Dostoevsky think she *ought* to have responded? Should she have just accepted the betrayal and grieved it and moved on from him (isn't this in a sense still less giving and devoted than what she actually did, since it involves abandoning him to his vices)? Technically everyone in the book endures some form of betrayal, but the sheer extent of it for Katerina and Smerdyakov makes it hard to imagine how or what an Alyosha-like response could even look like on their ends (except maybe forgiveness, or something). Nobody even wants their counsel or help or whatever.
TL;DR I guess another more succinct way the tension above manifests is in Dostoevsky’s take on Ivan and Katerina's respective actions: he seems to fault Ivan for abandoning his brothers when they needed him, while simultaneously faulting Katerina for not abandoning her ex-fiance??
2) (Moral responsibility and control) When Zosima says "There is only one salvation for you: take yourself up, and make yourself responsible for all the sins of men." I can't wrap my head around how you can be "responsible" for the sins of men without venturing into the territory of controlling them. If someone does something retarded, in what sense can you exercise this kind of moral responsibility without attempting to fix it for them, explain the errors of their ways, etc. etc. (Katerina-style)? What does it mean to be responsible for the "sin" of a person if not to attempt to fix or change them? There's a bunch of shit in the book that suggests that Alyosha thinks that transformation could only happen internally and not be imposed externally by another person (e.g. him not really engaging with Ivan's otherwise pretty reasonable arguments about the problem of evil), but if that's the case then how can someone else be "responsible" for someone else's lack of insight?
3) (Moral responsibility for thought crimes) The book seems to imply Ivan's in some sense morally responsible for the central tragedy because his ideas in "enable" or sanction Smerdyakov's actions. This seems kind of odd to me - how long does causal chain extend? You can't really control how people receive your ideas, and is the mere exploration of a genuine question something you have to be cautious about just because some other guy might run with it in a direction you never intended? Can you be morally responsible for something without *intending* the consequences of that thing?
4) (On what prompts moral salvation) Why did being thrown in prison prompt Dmitri to finally take an interest in moral salvation but not Katerina's suffering (obviously caused by him)? More generally, what makes a person collapse inwards like this if not argumentation or guilt or reason?
5) (On shame) Why does Dmitri respond to the perception that Katerina's morally righteous and forgiving by doubling down on his selfishness (by further indulging in his own shame, which is inherently a self absorbed emotion), but when Alyosha *also* behaves in morally righteous and forgiving ways, Dmitri doesn't have the same reaction? I don't think Katerina's righteousness is fake, it's just also enmeshed with a kind of attachment that seems to naturally follow from her unique relationship to Dmitri.
1) (Betrayal and selfless love) Dostoevsky seems to imply that Alyosha's love for Dmitri (and everyone) is ideal or better than the kind of self abnegating simp love Katerina provides, since I guess the latter is controlling in ways the former isn't. But isn't her response kind of reasonable given that she's betrothed to Dmitri? Her position's more entangled and emotionally and socially vulnerable than Alyosha's - since she's Dmitris' fiancee she presumably has a stake in his choices, so rationally she'd need to be controlling if he can't control himself. When he does retarded shit and betrays her it directly impacts her, while Alyosha can sort of just stand outside the prison and drop some encouraging words. How would Dostoevsky think she *ought* to have responded? Should she have just accepted the betrayal and grieved it and moved on from him (isn't this in a sense still less giving and devoted than what she actually did, since it involves abandoning him to his vices)? Technically everyone in the book endures some form of betrayal, but the sheer extent of it for Katerina and Smerdyakov makes it hard to imagine how or what an Alyosha-like response could even look like on their ends (except maybe forgiveness, or something). Nobody even wants their counsel or help or whatever.
TL;DR I guess another more succinct way the tension above manifests is in Dostoevsky’s take on Ivan and Katerina's respective actions: he seems to fault Ivan for abandoning his brothers when they needed him, while simultaneously faulting Katerina for not abandoning her ex-fiance??
2) (Moral responsibility and control) When Zosima says "There is only one salvation for you: take yourself up, and make yourself responsible for all the sins of men." I can't wrap my head around how you can be "responsible" for the sins of men without venturing into the territory of controlling them. If someone does something retarded, in what sense can you exercise this kind of moral responsibility without attempting to fix it for them, explain the errors of their ways, etc. etc. (Katerina-style)? What does it mean to be responsible for the "sin" of a person if not to attempt to fix or change them? There's a bunch of shit in the book that suggests that Alyosha thinks that transformation could only happen internally and not be imposed externally by another person (e.g. him not really engaging with Ivan's otherwise pretty reasonable arguments about the problem of evil), but if that's the case then how can someone else be "responsible" for someone else's lack of insight?
3) (Moral responsibility for thought crimes) The book seems to imply Ivan's in some sense morally responsible for the central tragedy because his ideas in "enable" or sanction Smerdyakov's actions. This seems kind of odd to me - how long does causal chain extend? You can't really control how people receive your ideas, and is the mere exploration of a genuine question something you have to be cautious about just because some other guy might run with it in a direction you never intended? Can you be morally responsible for something without *intending* the consequences of that thing?
4) (On what prompts moral salvation) Why did being thrown in prison prompt Dmitri to finally take an interest in moral salvation but not Katerina's suffering (obviously caused by him)? More generally, what makes a person collapse inwards like this if not argumentation or guilt or reason?
5) (On shame) Why does Dmitri respond to the perception that Katerina's morally righteous and forgiving by doubling down on his selfishness (by further indulging in his own shame, which is inherently a self absorbed emotion), but when Alyosha *also* behaves in morally righteous and forgiving ways, Dmitri doesn't have the same reaction? I don't think Katerina's righteousness is fake, it's just also enmeshed with a kind of attachment that seems to naturally follow from her unique relationship to Dmitri.