In twelve monthly installments across 1866 C.E., readers of The Russian Messenger followed a poverty-stricken former law student named Rodion Raskolnikov as he murdered a pawnbroker, convinced himself it was justified — and then watched his certainty collapse under the weight of his own conscience. The novel that emerged from those installments, Crime and Punishment, would permanently alter what the novel as a form could do.
Key details
- Crime and Punishment: Fyodor Dostoevsky’s novel first appeared in serial form in The Russian Messenger beginning in January 1866 C.E., with the final installment published in December of that year.
- Psychological realism: Dostoevsky pioneered a new narrative technique — using a third-person voice to render Raskolnikov’s interior experience with the immediacy of a first-person confession, a method that would influence novelists for generations.
- Serial publication: The novel was written and published simultaneously under intense financial and contractual pressure, with Dostoevsky racing to meet deadlines while also completing a second novel, The Gambler, for a different publisher at the same time.
The man behind the novel
Dostoevsky arrived at Crime and Punishment from a place of personal desperation. His brother Mikhail had died in early 1864 C.E., leaving debts the writer felt obligated to absorb. His own creditors were closing in. When he approached publisher Mikhail Katkov in September 1865 C.E. with a proposal, it was, by his own account, a last resort.
What he described to Katkov was modest in scope — a story or novella about a young man seduced by dangerous floating ideas about the rights of “extraordinary” individuals to transgress ordinary moral rules. By November 1865 C.E., the scope had grown. It was a novel.
What Dostoevsky had also done, crucially, was burn the early draft. He started again. The original version had been written in the first person — a diary or memoir form. The new version shifted to third person. That decision unlocked the book. The narrator could now see Raskolnikov’s thoughts from outside and inside simultaneously, tracking delusion and guilt with a precision no confessional format could achieve. Encyclopaedia Britannica describes this narrative innovation as central to the novel’s lasting influence on world literature.
What Raskolnikov’s crisis revealed
The novel’s moral architecture is deceptively simple: a man with a theory kills to test it, and the theory fails. Raskolnikov believes that history’s great figures — Napoleon being his example — have the right to step over ordinary moral limits in service of a higher purpose. He kills the pawnbroker as a kind of experiment.
What follows is not punishment in the legal sense — at least not immediately. It is the complete disintegration of his intellectual framework. The certainty that sustained the murder cannot survive contact with the reality of having committed it. His paranoia, confusion, and horror are not imposed from outside. They come from within.
This was new. Western literature had explored guilt before, but rarely as a cognitive and psychological unraveling tracked in such granular, moment-by-moment detail. Scholars writing in The Guardian have noted that Dostoevsky effectively invented what we now call the psychological thriller — not as a genre exercise but as a serious inquiry into how human beings convince themselves to do terrible things, and what happens when that conviction gives way.
The people behind the pages
It is worth noting who made the book physically possible. Anna Snitkina, a stenographer hired to help Dostoevsky meet his deadline for The Gambler, became indispensable during the final months of Crime and Punishment‘s composition. She would later become his wife. Without her, it is unlikely Dostoevsky could have fulfilled both contracts simultaneously. Her contribution to Russian literary history is rarely mentioned alongside his name.
The Russian Messenger itself played a structural role that is easy to overlook. The journal had already published Ivan Turgenev and Leo Tolstoy. Its audience was educated, literate, and accustomed to serious fiction. The serial format meant readers had to sit with the story month by month, living inside Raskolnikov’s deteriorating mental state across an entire year — an experience quite different from reading the finished book in one sitting.
Lasting impact
The novel’s downstream influence is difficult to overstate. Crime and Punishment helped establish psychological depth as a central expectation of serious fiction. Writers from Franz Kafka to Albert Camus to Toni Morrison have described Dostoevsky as formative. Literary critics have consistently placed it among the small number of novels that permanently changed what the form could accomplish.
Beyond literature, the novel entered philosophy, psychology, and criminology. Sigmund Freud wrote extensively about it. Existentialist thinkers found in Raskolnikov’s collapse a diagnosis of the crisis of secular self-justification — the danger that arises when individuals construct private moral frameworks that place them above shared human obligations.
More quietly, the novel raised questions that remain live: What drives intelligent people toward destructive ideologies? What is the relationship between poverty, social alienation, and moral collapse? These are not abstract puzzles. They are questions that social scientists, therapists, and policy makers still work on today. Dostoevsky did not answer them. He dramatized them so vividly that the questions became impossible to dismiss. Intellectual historians have traced the novel’s arguments about radicalism and self-deception forward through the 20th century’s most catastrophic political episodes.
Blindspots and limits
The novel centers almost entirely on a male intellectual’s inner life, and its female characters — Sonya the prostitute, Dunya the self-sacrificing sister — exist largely in relation to Raskolnikov’s psychological journey rather than as fully autonomous figures. Dostoevsky’s portrait of Saint Petersburg’s poor is vivid, but it is filtered through the consciousness of an educated man who considers himself, however conflictedly, exceptional. The experiences of the women and working-class characters who populate the novel’s margins remain largely unexplored on their own terms.
It is also worth noting that the novel’s moral resolution — Raskolnikov’s eventual confession and acceptance of punishment — reflects the author’s own evolving religious convictions, which some readers find imposed on the story rather than earned by it.
Read more
For more on this story, see: Wikipedia: Crime and Punishment
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- Global suicide rate has fallen by 40% since 1995
- Alzheimer’s risk cut in half by drug in landmark prevention trial
- The Good News for Humankind archive on the modern era
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