However, the suffering that he decides to display with Raskolnikov is not a typical type of suffering one would experience after brutally murdering two innocent women with a motive that it is the act of an extraordinary person. Raskolnikov’s suffering does not at all seem authentic and it seems as if Dostoevsky lets the crazy killer off easy, without any real suffering done to receive the cheap redemption he got. He suffers because of selfish reasons and seems to feel little guilt for the crime he committed. He gets a terrible illness throughout the novel but it does not look at all as if it was caused because of the
However, the suffering that he decides to display with Raskolnikov is not a typical type of suffering one would experience after brutally murdering two innocent women with a motive that it is the act of an extraordinary person. Raskolnikov’s suffering does not at all seem authentic and it seems as if Dostoevsky lets the crazy killer off easy, without any real suffering done to receive the cheap redemption he got. He suffers because of selfish reasons and seems to feel little guilt for the crime he committed. He gets a terrible illness throughout the novel but it does not look at all as if it was caused because of the