He was in the generation after the two men discussed here, but I think it is fair to consider him a slavophile and to think of many of his novels as defending slavophile ideas. (The Brothers Karamazov, in particular, is I think pretty clearly and fundamentally a defense of the ideas discussed here.)
How does Dostoevsky fit into this movement?
He was in the generation after the two men discussed here, but I think it is fair to consider him a slavophile and to think of many of his novels as defending slavophile ideas. (The Brothers Karamazov, in particular, is I think pretty clearly and fundamentally a defense of the ideas discussed here.)
Thanks.