Great Books IV Spring 2016

The Brothers Karamazov - Fyodor Dostoevsky

"Laceration"

Reading/Discussion Schedule

February 11: II.8; February 15: III; February 18: V.3; February 22: VI.2;

February 25: VIII.3; March 7: IX.5 ; March 10:X;

March 14: XI.8; March 17: XII.8; March 21: End.

March 24: Final Discussion.

Pronunciation Guide

Discussion Prompts

 

February 11

QdJ - What is your earliest recollection of your mother?

  1. Look for connections to both Kierkegaard and Nietzche in this work.
  2. Is Fyodor buffooning or serious as he talks about the hell hooks?
  3. Summarize Fyodor's theology.
  4. Why is Alyosha so embarassed by his father?
  5. Which account of faith in today's reading is most powerful?
  6. What do you make of Zosima's account of the church vs. state?

February 15

  1. What does Dmitri want from Alyosha?
  2. What makes a Karamazov?
  3. Viewing each character as either in an ascent or in a descent, where is Dmitri? Fyodor? Alyosha? Ivan? Smerdyakov?
  4. Bring your own questions and be prepared to pose them in class.

February 18

  1. Construct a "laceration" catalog.
  2. How is laceration a leitmotif for the entire work?
  3. How does laceration contribute to Alyosha's growth and development?
  4. How is Katerina Ivanovna like Fyodor?

February 22

QdJ - When you see God, face to face, what will you ask Him?

  1. Does Ivan really believe in God?
  2. Read the Rebellion and Grand Inquisitor passages twice. Who is the Grand Inquisitor?
  3. How would Ivan define human freedom?
  4. How does Alyosha respond to Ivan?
  5. What is the crux of each of the three temptations of Christ, according to Ivan?
  6. Find all instances of character pairings that represent great likenesses or oppositions - e.g. Fyodor and Katya.
  7. Do character analyses of Smerdyakov & Zosima.
  8. What are potential themes that capture the essence of the novel?

 

 

February 25

  1. How does each character contribute to Alyosha's identity development?
  2. Describe the overall trajectory of Alyosha's character development.
  3. Are Father Zosima's words enough to counterbalance Ivan's words? Explain.
  4. How does an onion serve as a leitmotif?

March 7

  1. What physical entity used in the novel best symbolizes each character in the work and why? For example, for Father Zosima, one might argue that the ocean is such a symbol.

  2. Compile this list and bring it to class. Also, compile a list of all of the symbols you see in the novel thus far.

  3. We will hold a "Reader's Theatre" of "In the Dark".

  4. How does Book VIII "rhyme" with or "mirror" Mitya's confessions in Book III?

  5. In what way is Dmitri an incomplete soul?

  6. Why is the pestle a possible symbol for Dmitri's character?

March 10

  1. What are Mitya's three torments?

  2. What correspondences and contrasts can we find between Mitya's three-part confession (Book III) and his three-part torment (Book IX)?

  3. How is religious faith connected with suffering?

  4. Which Karamazov brother is Kolya most like and why?

  5. How does the account of Kolya, Ilyusha, and the other boys illustrate Zosima's platitude about the ocean?

  6. How does the Grand Inquisitor section echo in Book X?

March 14

  1. How have Lise, Madame Khokhlakov, Grushka, Dmitri, & Ivan changed?  How does Alyosha interact with these changes?

  2. Any surprises in this portion of the novel? Any echoes of previous sections?

  3. Analyze Smerdyakov's character. Is he "confessing" to Ivan?

  4. In what ways do each of the following themes resonate in Book XI:  secret, hymn, hallucination, guilt, aberration?

  5. How do the characters of Lise, Ilyusha, and Kolya form a response to Ivan's theories on the injustice of childrens' suffering?

  6. What is the significance of Smerdyakov's affirmation of God's presence?

March 17

  1. For Ivan, is the devil a hallucination or not? Is the devil's strategy to reawaken Ivan's faith or to kill it?

  2. Analyze the flow of the trial and the role of each character.

  3. Compare the courtroom scene to that of the Karamazov family visiting the monastery in Book II.

  4. In what way is each brother guilty of Fyodor's death?
  5. What does the trial teach about getting at the truth?
  6. How DOES one person determine the guilt of another person?

March 21

  1. How does the end of the novel resolve loose ends?
  2. How does John 12:24 serve as the defining passage of the novel?
  3. What other passages might serve in this capacity?
  4. Read the speech at the stone aloud.
  5. What is the most important lesson of the novel?
  6. Why is Alyosha our hero?
  7. Final thoughts, personal applications, Nietzschean echoes ...

March 24

Final Discussion