

CRIME AND PUNISHMENT
In Crime and Punishment, Dostoevsky explores the tension between morality, guilt, and redemption through Rodion Raskolnikov, an impoverished former student in 19th-century Saint Petersburg. Convinced that extraordinary people can break the law for a greater good, he murders an elderly pawnbroker. However, instead of liberation, the crime drags him into intense inner torment and police suspicion.
Alongside, subplots —such as the tragedy of the Marmeladov family and his bond with Sonia, a symbol of compassion and faith— reflect the social and moral decay of the era. Ultimately, Raskolnikov confesses, is sentenced, and sent to Siberia, where, accompanied by Sonia, he begins a spiritual purification process suggesting the possibility of redemption
Crime and Punishment tells the story of Rodion Raskolnikov, a young student in Saint Petersburg who, driven by poverty and nihilist ideas, murders a pawnbroker to prove his moral superiority and rid the world of a “social parasite.” After the crime, he is haunted by guilt and psychological persecution from Inspector Porfiry. His relationship with Sonia Marmeladova, a young prostitute with deep Christian faith, guides him toward repentance and confession, beginning his path to redemption


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