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Crime and Punishment - The Confession

Fyodor Dostoevsky

Crime and Punishment

The Confession

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Summary

The Confession

Crime and Punishment by Fyodor Dostoevsky

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The journey to Siberia is described briefly but powerfully. The protagonist travels with other convicts, chained, under guard. The physical journey mirrors his internal one - moving from his old life toward an unknown future. Sonia travels separately but manages to see him at stops along the way. Her presence is a lifeline, a reminder that he's not completely alone. The other convicts are curious about him - a former student among thieves and murderers. He doesn't fit their world, and they sense it. The chapter captures the strange liminal space of transition - no longer part of his old life but not yet settled into his new one. The landscape changes as they move east, becoming harsher and more remote. It's a physical manifestation of exile, of being removed from everything familiar. Yet there's also a strange freedom in having nothing left to lose. The worst has happened, the secret is out, the sentence is being served. For the first time in the novel, the protagonist isn't running from anything. He's moving toward his punishment, and paradoxically, that acceptance brings a kind of peace.

Coming Up in Chapter 38

With Porfiry's words echoing in his mind, Raskolnikov must make the most important decision of his life. Will he find the courage to confess, or will pride and fear keep him trapped in his psychological prison?

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Original text
complete·5,402 words
H

e spent that evening till ten o’clock going from one low haunt to another. Katia too turned up and sang another gutter song, how a certain “villain and tyrant”

“began kissing Katia.”

1 / 27

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Why This Matters

Connect literature to life

Skill: Reading Pressure Patterns

This chapter helps readers identify how stress reshapes judgment, power, and relationship dynamics in real time.

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Now let's explore the literary elements.

Key Quotes & Analysis

"The journey to Siberia is described briefly but powerfully."

— Chapter framing

Context: Core movement described by the chapter summary

This line captures the chapter's central pressure point and the shift it creates in character behavior.

"Actions under pressure expose deeper motives and limits."

— Thematic framing

Context: Interpreting this chapter's conflict

The chapter emphasizes that crisis does not invent character; it reveals structure already present.

Thematic Threads

Consequence

In This Chapter

Prior choices narrow present options and increase emotional stakes.

Development

The chapter advances from abstract tension to concrete cost.

Power

In This Chapter

Status, dependence, or leverage shape who can define reality in the scene.

Development

Control shifts through conversation, framing, and reaction.

Identity

In This Chapter

Characters struggle to maintain a coherent self-story under contradiction.

Development

Internal narratives are tested against observable behavior.

Relationship Strain

In This Chapter

Trust and communication degrade when secrecy or fear dominate interaction.

Development

The chapter escalates interpersonal risk alongside plot risk.

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You now have the context. Time to form your own thoughts.

Discussion Questions

  1. 1

    What pressure in this chapter most strongly drives behavior change?

  2. 2

    Which character controls the frame of the conflict, and how?

  3. 3

    Where does self-justification break down into visible consequence?

  4. 4

    How do status and vulnerability shape what each person can safely say?

  5. 5

    What alternative choice might have reduced downstream harm?

Critical Thinking Exercise

Pressure Map

Map one chapter decision with four columns: pressure source, available options, likely short-term relief, and long-term consequence. Then identify which option best preserves integrity under constraint.

Consider:

  • •Separate immediate emotion from structural incentives
  • •Track who bears risk versus who controls terms
  • •Define one boundary that prevents escalation
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Coming Up Next...

Chapter 38: The Sentence

With Porfiry's words echoing in his mind, Raskolnikov must make the most important decision of his life. Will he find the courage to confess, or will pride and fear keep him trapped in his psychological prison?

Continue to Chapter 38
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At the Crossroads
Contents
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The Sentence

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