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Why This Matters
Connect literature to life
This chapter teaches how to read your body's rejection of moral compromises—the sleeplessness, paranoia, and hypervigilance that signal you've acted against your core values.
Now let's explore the literary elements.
Key Quotes & Analysis
"Am I really going to tell? Am I really going to confess?"
Context: His panicked thoughts when he receives the police summons
Shows how guilt creates its own torture. He's terrified of being caught but also drawn to confession. This internal conflict will drive much of the novel's action.
"If they question me, perhaps I'll simply tell. I want to tell."
Context: His contradictory impulses about confessing to the police
Reveals the psychological burden of keeping such a massive secret. Part of him wants to be caught because carrying this alone is unbearable. It shows how isolation makes guilt worse.
"His heart was beating so violently that it was painful."
Context: Describing Raskolnikov's physical reaction to stress and guilt
Demonstrates how emotional turmoil manifests physically. Dostoevsky shows that we can't separate mind and body - moral choices affect our entire being, making guilt a form of illness.
Thematic Threads
Identity
In This Chapter
Raskolnikov discovers his self-image as a superior person was completely wrong—he's not above moral consequences
Development
Evolving from his earlier arrogant theorizing to confronting who he actually is versus who he imagined himself to be
Class
In This Chapter
His poverty-driven crime hasn't elevated him above his circumstances—it's trapped him in a worse psychological prison
Development
Developing from seeing poverty as justification for extraordinary action to realizing class doesn't determine moral capacity
Consequences
In This Chapter
The real punishment isn't external detection but internal transformation—he's become someone he doesn't recognize
Development
Introduced here as the central mechanism that will drive the entire novel's exploration of guilt and redemption
Self-Deception
In This Chapter
His intellectual theories about extraordinary people crumble when faced with the reality of his own moral nature
Development
Evolving from confident rationalization to the beginning of painful self-awareness
Fear
In This Chapter
Every interaction becomes potentially threatening because he's living in opposition to his true self
Development
Introduced here as the natural result of moral compromise—paranoia as the price of violating authentic values
You now have the context. Time to form your own thoughts.
Discussion Questions
- 1
What physical and emotional symptoms does Raskolnikov experience after the murders, and how do they affect his daily life?
- 2
Why does Raskolnikov react with such terror to a simple police summons, even though it might be about something unrelated?
- 3
Where have you seen someone become paranoid or physically sick after doing something that went against their values?
- 4
If you were advising someone who was considering a major moral compromise 'for good reasons,' what questions would you ask them?
- 5
What does Raskolnikov's breakdown teach us about the relationship between our actions and our sense of self?
Critical Thinking Exercise
Map Your Moral Compass
Think of a time when you did something that felt wrong to you, even if others said it was justified or necessary. Write down the physical and emotional symptoms you experienced afterward - trouble sleeping, jumpiness, irritability, obsessive thoughts. Then identify what core value you violated. Finally, trace how that violation affected your behavior and relationships in the days that followed.
Consider:
- •Notice how your body responded before your mind fully processed what happened
- •Consider whether the 'good reasons' for your action actually protected you from internal consequences
- •Reflect on whether trying to ignore or rationalize the discomfort made it stronger or weaker
Coming Up Next...
Chapter 12: Razumikhin's Care
At the police station, Raskolnikov will face his first real test of whether he can keep his secret. But the conversation that awaits him there isn't what he expects, and his reactions might reveal more than he intends.





