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Saints, Monsters And All In Between: Analysis of Dostoevsky's Works, #1
Coles
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Saints, Monsters And All In Between: Analysis of Dostoevsky's Works, #1 in Brampton, ON
By None
Current price: $13.99

Coles
Saints, Monsters And All In Between: Analysis of Dostoevsky's Works, #1 in Brampton, ON
By None
Current price: $13.99
Loading Inventory...
Size: Kobo eBook
*Product information and pricing may vary - to confirm current pricing, availability, shipping, and return information please contact Coles. In the event of a pricing discrepancy, the retailer's price will apply.
Dostoevsky's The Meek One arrives disguised as confession. A husband speaks into the void after his young wife leaps from the window. His monologue is frantic, circular, self‑absolving. But the tragedy does not belong to the man who speaks — it belongs to the woman who never does.
What appears to be a domestic tale is, in truth, a psychological crucible. A study of how control masquerades as care. How silence becomes rebellion. How the desire to be seen as good can become its own quiet form of violence.
This is not a story about a meek girl and a stern man. It is a story about possession , interpretation , and the soul's refusal to be owned.
Key Themes
Silence as Sovereignty — when refusal becomes the last remaining form of agency
The Violence of Goodness — how moral self‑image becomes a mechanism of domination
Intimacy as Ideology — the home as a system of rituals, surveillance, and doctrine
Utopia as Escape — fantasies constructed to avoid the risk of real intimacy
Suicide as Protest — the leap as metaphysical refusal rather than collapse
Beyond the Text — Dostoevsky's Quietest Warning
The Meek One sits at the crossroads of Dostoevsky's obsessions:
the seduction of ideology
the fragility of the soul
the violence of moral pride
the danger of saviours
the sovereignty of silence
It is a ghost story where the ghost is still alive. A parable of systems that comfort in order to conquer. A warning about the soft forms of tyranny — the ones that whisper rather than strike.
Dostoevsky's The Meek One arrives disguised as confession. A husband speaks into the void after his young wife leaps from the window. His monologue is frantic, circular, self‑absolving. But the tragedy does not belong to the man who speaks — it belongs to the woman who never does.
What appears to be a domestic tale is, in truth, a psychological crucible. A study of how control masquerades as care. How silence becomes rebellion. How the desire to be seen as good can become its own quiet form of violence.
This is not a story about a meek girl and a stern man. It is a story about possession , interpretation , and the soul's refusal to be owned.
Key Themes
Silence as Sovereignty — when refusal becomes the last remaining form of agency
The Violence of Goodness — how moral self‑image becomes a mechanism of domination
Intimacy as Ideology — the home as a system of rituals, surveillance, and doctrine
Utopia as Escape — fantasies constructed to avoid the risk of real intimacy
Suicide as Protest — the leap as metaphysical refusal rather than collapse
Beyond the Text — Dostoevsky's Quietest Warning
The Meek One sits at the crossroads of Dostoevsky's obsessions:
the seduction of ideology
the fragility of the soul
the violence of moral pride
the danger of saviours
the sovereignty of silence
It is a ghost story where the ghost is still alive. A parable of systems that comfort in order to conquer. A warning about the soft forms of tyranny — the ones that whisper rather than strike.





















