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Nastasya Filippovna

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for the first time. Totsky has offered a large sum of money for the arranged marriage, but Nastasya Filippovna distrusts Ganya's motives and is aware that his family disapproves of her. She deliberately increases the tension in the room by mocking them and behaving insultingly, and when Rogozhin suddenly arrives with a retinue of drunken rogues, she laughingly encourages his inebriated attempts to buy her away from Ganya. When the scene reaches a climax, with Ganya on the point of striking his own sister for spitting in his face, Myshkin defuses the situation by diverting Ganya's violence toward himself. In the stunned aftermath, Nastasya Filippovna maintains, somewhat less assuredly, her sarcastic tone, and Myshkin reproaches her with feeling: "Aren't you ashamed? Surely you are not what you are pretending to be now? It isn't possible!" (p 108). This produces a change, and as Nastasya Filippovna leaves she kisses the hand of Ganya's mother and whispers to her that Myshkin is right. Rogozhin does not notice the gesture, and goes off with his retinue to raise the 100,000 rubles he has offered.
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a game is played in which each person must recount the story of the worst thing they have ever done. Totsky tells an innocuous anecdote from the distant past, and Nastasya Filippovna becomes angry. She turns to the Prince and asks him whether she should marry Ganya. Myshkin advises her not to, and she immediately announces that she is following this advice. At this point, Rogozhin and his retinue arrive with the 100,000 rubles. Nastasya Filippovna prepares to leave with them, but Myshkin advises her not to go with Rogozhin either, and offers to marry her himself. He speaks gently and sincerely, assuring her that she is pure and not to blame, and that he will love and respect her all his life. She is temporarily stunned as she realizes that Myshkin is the embodiment of her long dreamed-of innocence, but quickly falls back into her destructive persona. She tells Myshkin that she will not be like Totsky and corrupt children, and, after throwing the 100,000 rubles in the fire for Ganya to retrieve if he wants them, leaves with Rogozhin.
94:, "Nastasya Filippovna's voice is divided between the voice that pronounces her a guilty 'fallen woman' and the voice that vindicates and accepts her." Myshkin, himself a pure-hearted man, represents for her this second voice, and he unreservedly affirms her innocence even when she is fully immersed in her destructive role as the corrupted and condemned woman. She herself recognizes Myshkin as the possible realization of her innocence, but convinced also of her own corruption, she is equally driven by self-destructive and vengeful urges, and she refuses to cast herself in the role of a corrupter of children like Totsky. Thus she chooses to give herself to Rogozhin, for whom she can wholly become the 'fallen' woman. This is not because Rogozhin himself in any way morally condemns her, but because his mad and violent obsession with her resonates with her self-destructive urge, or the voice that identifies her as guilty. 140:
what to expect, but it quickly becomes apparent that Aglaya's purpose is to castigate and insult her. Nastasya Filippovna is shocked, as her belief in Aglaya's purity and superiority had been sincere. Myshkin is aware of this, and tries to dissuade Aglaya, which provokes her to greater anger. As Aglaya becomes more and more unrestrained and vindictive, Nastasya Filippovna begins to respond in kind. She orders Rogozhin to leave and demands that the Prince stay with her. Overcome, not for the first time, with the pain and despair in Nastasya Filippovna's face, Myshkin turns to Aglaya and reproaches her for the attack. Distraught and now full of hatred for him, Aglaya runs off. Myshkin tries to go after her but Nastasya Filippovna stops him.
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true purity, and desperately tries to bring her and Myshkin together. She seeks, largely successfully, to publicly disgrace an apparent suitor to Aglaya—the Epanchins' friend Yevgeny Pavlovich, and writes long letters to Aglaya telling her she is in love with her and pleading with her to marry Myshkin. Aglaya interprets this as an indication that Nastasya Filippovna is in love with Myshkin herself, and is trying to keep a hold on him by playing the role of tragic victim. As the love relationship begins to develop between Aglaya and Myshkin, Aglaya, shaken by the letters and influenced by ill-intentioned gossip, begins to see Nastasya Filippovna as her rival, and eventually forces the Prince into making a choice between them.
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disdain for his love, and by jealousy of Myshkin. Nastasya Filippovna is tortured by her inability to accept either her innocence or her guilt, while at the same time ardently believing in both, and she flees from one to the other, from Rogozhin to Myshkin and from Myshkin back to Rogozhin, being driven slowly insane by the impossibility of resolution. According to
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It is only in Part 4 that the three characters appear together for the first time in an extended scene. Through Rogozhin and other intermediaries, Aglaya has arranged a meeting with Nastasya Filippovna. She brings the Prince to the meeting, and Rogozhin is also present. Nastasya Filippovna is unsure
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The second scene occurs later that evening at Nastasya Filippovna's birthday soirée. In the presence of all the interested parties and a number of other guests (including Myshkin, who has turned up uninvited), she is to announce her decision on the proposed marriage. During the course of the evening
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Early in Part 2 of the novel we learn that the relationship between Nastasya Filippovna and Rogozhin has broken down, and that Rogozhin thinks this has happened because Nastasya Filippovna is really in love with the Prince. Although Rogozhin continues his tortured pursuit of Nastasya Filippovna and
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All the essentials of this drama are established in Part 1 of the novel, particularly in two crucial scenes. The first is at the Ivolgins' apartment, where Nastasya Filippovna is visiting the household of her potential fiancé, Ganya. Here she meets Myshkin, who is renting a room from the Ivolgins,
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Following this, the relationship between Myshkin and Aglaya effectively ends, and in the book's concluding chapters the narrative focus returns to the first triangle. Nastasya Filippovna and Myshkin become engaged, at her insistence, but on the day of the wedding she again flees to Rogozhin. In so
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in the name of his Christian ideal. By thus idealizing Myshkin, she fails to see the depth and sincerity of his compassionate response to Nastasya Filippovna's suffering. Nastasya Filippovna, unable to embrace Myshkin's love or accept herself as pure, in turn idealizes Aglaya as a manifestation of
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Throughout the novel Nastasya Filippovna is torn between these two interlocked but irreconcilable drives, and all three participants in the triangle are tortured as a result. Myshkin is tortured by the clarity of his insight into her suffering. Rogozhin is tortured by her cruelty towards him and
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Nastasya Filippovna occupies a vital position in two overlapping dramas in the novel, both of which could be described as love triangles. The first involves the characters of Prince Myshkin, Nastasya Filippovna and Parfyon Rogozhin, and the second involves Myshkin, Nastasya Filippovna and Aglaya
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In Parts 2 and 3 the main narrative focus shifts to the second triangle, in which Nastasya Filippovna plays a secondary but essential role in the course taken by the relationship between the Prince and Aglaya Epanchin. Aglaya is fascinated by the Prince's efforts to 'save' the 'fallen woman',
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Though of aristocratic origin, beautiful and intelligent, Nastasya Filippovna is regarded by society as a 'fallen' woman, owing to her having spent four years as the concubine of the aristocrat Totsky, a position into which she was forced at the age of sixteen. Much of the drama of Nastasya
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maintains an ambivalent friendship with Myshkin, he shows himself to be capable of doing violence to both of them. After this the first triangle recedes somewhat into the background, although it remains as an ominous presence in all the characters' minds.
110:: "Facing the insurmountable contradiction of inner purity and her outward disgrace, Nastasya Filippovna as a character is irremediably doomed, and she will function to bring down 'her saviour', the Prince, in her own tragic end." 144:
doing, she abandons once and for all any hope of finally accepting herself, and effectively signs her own death warrant. According to Bakhtin, for Nastasya Filippovna "Rogozhin means the knife, and she knows it."
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In the first triangle, the two male protagonists represent an appeal to one or other of the contradictory voices in the inner dialogue of Nastasya Filippovna's soul. According to
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Filippovna's character comes from the contradiction between her essential innocence, which is clearly recognized by the novel's central character
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misinterpreting it as a heroic and chivalrous deed like that of a medieval knight, a "serious and not comic"
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The heroine of the novel "Idiot" by Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoevsky
128: 615: 76: 85: 113: 50: 795: 574:Another Man's Wife and a Husband Under the Bed 363: 38: 781:Twenty Six Days from the Life of Dostoyevsky 131:'s poem who performs acts of valour in the 370: 356: 77:Significance of the character to the novel 623:The Beggar Boy at Christ's Christmas Tree 197:. University of Minnesota Press. p.  86:Nastasya Filippovna, Myshkin and Rogozhin 311:. Translator: Constance Garnett. p 231-5 190: 114:Nastasya Filippovna, Myshkin and Aglaya 14: 824:Literary characters introduced in 1869 809:Fictional Russian people in literature 796: 235:. Wordsworth Classics. pp. 152–7. 230: 166:. Princeton University Press. p.  377: 351: 159: 24: 662:Winter Notes on Summer Impressions 25: 835: 588:The Christmas Tree and a Wedding 194:Problems of Dostoevsky's Poetics 163:Dostoevsky: A Writer in His Time 819:Female characters in literature 336: 327: 314: 301: 292: 52:Nastásʹya Filíppovna Baráshkova 283: 270: 257: 248: 239: 224: 215: 184: 153: 55:) is the principal heroine of 31:Nastasya Filippovna Barashkova 13: 1: 804:Fyodor Dostoyevsky characters 644:The Dream of a Ridiculous Man 147: 40:Настасья Филипповна Барашкова 37:and post-reform Russian: 441:The Village of Stepanchikovo 7: 280:. Part 1, chapters XIII–XVI 51: 10: 840: 715: 679: 653: 558: 523: 408: 385: 191:Bakhtin, Mikhail (1984). 39: 267:. Part 1, chapters IX–X. 127:, or the Poor Knight in 449:Humiliated and Insulted 548:Notes from Underground 513:The Brothers Karamazov 324:. Part 4, chapter VIII 160:Frank, Joseph (2010). 457:The House of the Dead 342:Bakhtin (1984). p 258 254:Bakhtin (1984). p 258 245:Bakhtin (1984). p 257 221:Bakhtin (1984). p 257 753:The Grand Inquisitor 465:Crime and Punishment 231:Dostoevsky, Fyodor. 729:Lyubov Dostoevskaya 489:The Eternal Husband 333:Frank (2010). p 588 298:Frank (2010). p 585 289:Frank (2010). p 581 735:Mikhail Dostoevsky 707:Rodion Raskolnikov 687:Nastasya Filipovna 433:Netochka Nezvanova 18:Nastasya Filipovna 791: 790: 747:Dostoevsky Museum 723:Anna Dostoevskaya 692:Alyosha Karamazov 637:The Peasant Marey 379:Fyodor Dostoevsky 208:978-0-8166-1228-4 177:978-0-691-12819-1 57:Fyodor Dostoevsky 49: 16:(Redirected from 831: 697:Fyodor Karamazov 669:A Writer's Diary 602:A Nasty Anecdote 581:The Honest Thief 372: 365: 358: 349: 348: 343: 340: 334: 331: 325: 318: 312: 305: 299: 296: 290: 287: 281: 274: 268: 261: 255: 252: 246: 243: 237: 236: 228: 222: 219: 213: 212: 188: 182: 181: 157: 54: 44: 42: 41: 21: 839: 838: 834: 833: 832: 830: 829: 828: 794: 793: 792: 787: 711: 675: 649: 567:Mr. Prokharchin 554: 519: 404: 381: 376: 346: 341: 337: 332: 328: 319: 315: 306: 302: 297: 293: 288: 284: 275: 271: 262: 258: 253: 249: 244: 240: 229: 225: 220: 216: 209: 189: 185: 178: 158: 154: 150: 116: 92:Mikhail Bakhtin 88: 79: 28: 23: 22: 15: 12: 11: 5: 837: 827: 826: 821: 816: 811: 806: 789: 788: 786: 785: 777: 769: 761: 759:Pushkin Speech 756: 749: 744: 741:Polina Suslova 738: 732: 726: 719: 717: 713: 712: 710: 709: 704: 702:Prince Myshkin 699: 694: 689: 683: 681: 677: 676: 674: 673: 665: 657: 655: 651: 650: 648: 647: 640: 633: 626: 619: 612: 605: 598: 591: 584: 577: 570: 562: 560: 556: 555: 553: 552: 544: 536: 527: 525: 521: 520: 518: 517: 509: 505:The Adolescent 501: 493: 485: 477: 469: 461: 453: 445: 437: 429: 421: 412: 410: 406: 405: 403: 402: 397: 392: 386: 383: 382: 375: 374: 367: 360: 352: 345: 344: 335: 326: 313: 300: 291: 282: 269: 256: 247: 238: 223: 214: 207: 183: 176: 151: 149: 146: 115: 112: 87: 84: 78: 75: 71:Prince Myshkin 59:'s 1869 novel 26: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 836: 825: 822: 820: 817: 815: 812: 810: 807: 805: 802: 801: 799: 783: 782: 778: 776: 774: 770: 768: 766: 762: 760: 757: 754: 750: 748: 745: 742: 739: 736: 733: 730: 727: 725:(second wife) 724: 721: 720: 718: 714: 708: 705: 703: 700: 698: 695: 693: 690: 688: 685: 684: 682: 678: 671: 670: 666: 663: 659: 658: 656: 652: 645: 641: 638: 634: 631: 627: 624: 620: 617: 613: 610: 609:The Crocodile 606: 603: 599: 596: 592: 589: 585: 582: 578: 575: 571: 568: 564: 563: 561: 559:Short stories 557: 550: 549: 545: 542: 541: 540:Uncle's Dream 537: 534: 533: 529: 528: 526: 522: 515: 514: 510: 507: 506: 502: 499: 498: 494: 491: 490: 486: 483: 482: 478: 475: 474: 470: 467: 466: 462: 459: 458: 454: 451: 450: 446: 443: 442: 438: 435: 434: 430: 427: 426: 422: 419: 418: 414: 413: 411: 407: 401: 398: 396: 393: 391: 388: 387: 384: 380: 373: 368: 366: 361: 359: 354: 353: 350: 339: 330: 323: 317: 310: 304: 295: 286: 279: 273: 266: 260: 251: 242: 234: 227: 218: 210: 204: 200: 196: 195: 187: 179: 173: 169: 165: 164: 156: 152: 145: 141: 137: 134: 130: 126: 120: 111: 109: 103: 99: 95: 93: 83: 74: 72: 66: 64: 63: 58: 53: 47: 36: 32: 19: 779: 772: 764: 686: 667: 630:The Meek One 595:White Nights 546: 538: 532:The Landlady 530: 511: 503: 495: 487: 479: 471: 463: 455: 447: 439: 431: 423: 415: 390:Bibliography 338: 329: 321: 320:Dostoevsky. 316: 308: 307:Dostoevsky. 303: 294: 285: 277: 276:Dostoevsky. 272: 264: 263:Dostoevsky. 259: 250: 241: 232: 226: 217: 193: 186: 162: 155: 142: 138: 121: 117: 108:Joseph Frank 104: 100: 96: 89: 80: 67: 60: 30: 29: 784:(1981 film) 672:(1873–1881) 654:Non-fiction 473:The Gambler 125:Don Quixote 82:Epanchina. 798:Categories 743:(mistress) 731:(daughter) 680:Characters 425:The Double 148:References 35:pre-reform 814:The Idiot 737:(brother) 481:The Idiot 417:Poor Folk 322:The Idiot 309:The Idiot 278:The Idiot 265:the Idiot 233:The Idiot 62:The Idiot 46:romanized 775:magazine 767:magazine 664:" (1863) 646:" (1877) 639:" (1876) 632:" (1876) 625:" (1876) 618:" (1873) 611:" (1865) 604:" (1862) 597:" (1848) 590:" (1848) 583:" (1848) 576:" (1848) 569:" (1846) 524:Novellas 133:Crusades 716:Related 395:Letters 129:Pushkin 765:Vremya 551:(1864) 543:(1859) 535:(1847) 516:(1880) 508:(1875) 500:(1872) 497:Demons 492:(1870) 484:(1869) 476:(1867) 468:(1866) 460:(1862) 452:(1861) 444:(1859) 436:(1849) 428:(1846) 420:(1846) 409:Novels 400:Themes 205:  174:  773:Epoch 616:Bobok 203:ISBN 172:ISBN 199:257 168:581 800:: 201:. 170:. 65:. 43:, 755:" 751:" 660:" 642:" 635:" 628:" 621:" 614:" 607:" 600:" 593:" 586:" 579:" 572:" 565:" 371:e 364:t 357:v 211:. 180:. 48:: 33:( 20:)

Index

Nastasya Filipovna
pre-reform
romanized
Fyodor Dostoevsky
The Idiot
Prince Myshkin
Mikhail Bakhtin
Joseph Frank
Don Quixote
Pushkin
Crusades
Dostoevsky: A Writer in His Time
581
ISBN
978-0-691-12819-1
Problems of Dostoevsky's Poetics
257
ISBN
978-0-8166-1228-4
v
t
e
Fyodor Dostoevsky
Bibliography
Letters
Themes
Poor Folk
The Double
Netochka Nezvanova
The Village of Stepanchikovo

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