University Press of America
Pages: 270
Trim: 5¾ x 8½
978-0-7618-3098-6 • Paperback • January 2005 • $67.99 • (£52.00)
Joe E. Barnhart is Professor of Philosophy and Religion Studies at the University of North Texas. Professor Barnhart holds a Ph.D. in Philosophy from Boston University. He is the author of journal articles and papers on Dostoevsky, Tolstoy, Karl Popper, and biblical criticism.
Chapter 1 Preface and Acknowledgments
Chapter 2 Introduction: Hearing Voices: Joe Barnhart, Editor
Chapter 3 Rival Ideologies: Dostoevsky on Evil as a Perversion of Personhood: A Reading of Ivan Karamazov and the Grand Inquisitor: Ralph C. Wood
Chapter 4 Still Too High a Price? Ivan's Question in the Light of Contemporary Theodicy: Dan R. Stiver
Chapter 5 Encountering the Incarnate Subject: Dostoevsky's Fiction as an Embodiment of and Contribution to Orthodox Theology: Aaron Taylor
Chapter 6 Dostoevsky and the Historical Christ: Joe Barnhart
Chapter 7 Dostoevsky and Alienation: Linda Kraeger
Chapter 8 Family Voices in Conflict: The Karamazovs-A Paradigm in Dysfunctionality: Ignat Avsey
Chapter 9 Son and Fathers: The Character of Dominant Ideas and the Ideas of Dominant Characters in a Raw Youth: Joseph D. Stamey
Chapter 10 Contracts with Fate: Dostoevsky's Characters: Joe Barnhart
Chapter 11 The Village of Stepanchikovo or "There's a man with No Clothes On!": Ignat Avsey
Chapter 12 Going Underground: Fyodor Dostoevsky's Notes from Underground: Victor Terras
Chapter 13 Schelling, Dostoevsky, and Chernychevsky: Egoism, Freedom, and Madness in Notes from Underground: James M. McLachlan
Chapter 14 The Literary Artist's Fantastic Realism: The French and the Russian Underground Man: Dostoevsky and Montherlant: Victor Terras
Chapter 15 "Living at Double Intensity": Dialogized Consciousness, the Question of Satire, and the Ethics of Representation in Dostoevsky's Poor Folk: Stephen Souris
Chapter 16 The Translator's Tale in the Bible and Dostoevskyland: Ignat Avsey
Chapter 17 Brief Biographies of the Authors
This collection provides some thought-provoking insights, particularly on the religious dimension of Dosteovsky's fiction.
— Julian W. Connolly, University of Virginia; Slavic and East European Journal