A Raw Youth

Arkady Dolgoruky, is a 19-year-old intellectual. He is the illegitimate son of a landowner and dreams to become rich. In his quest to fulfil his dream, he meets people who teach him many kinds of ideologies. Thus, the work reflects Russian society.


By : Fyodor Dostoyevsky (1821 - 1881),Translated by Constance Garnett (1861 - 1946)

01 - Part 1, Chapter 1



02 - Part 1, Chapter 2



03 - Part 1, Chapter 3



04 - Part 1, Chapter 4



05 - Part 1, Chapter 5



06 - Part 1, Chapter 6



07 - Part 1, Chapter 7



08 - Part 1, Chapter 8



09 - Part 1, Chapter 9



10 - Part 1, Chapter 10



11 - Part 2, Chapter 1



12 - Part 2, Chapter 2



13 - Part 2, Chapter 3



14 - Part 2, Chapter 4



15 - Part 2, Chapter 5



16 - Part 2, Chapter 6



17 - Part 2, Chapter 7



18 - Part 2, Chapter 8



19 - Part 2, Chapter 9



20 - Part 3, Chapter 1



21 - Part 3, Chapter 2



22 - Part 3, Chapter 3



23 - Part 3, Chapter 4



24 - Part 3, Chapter 5



25 - Part 3, Chapter 6



26 - Part 3, Chapter 7



27 - Part 3, Chapter 8



28 - Part 3, Chapter 9



29 - Part 3, Chapter 10



30 - Part 3, Chapter 11



31 - Part 3, Chapter 12



32 - Part 3, Chapter 13


The novel chronicles the life of 19-year-old intellectual, Arkady Dolgoruky, illegitimate child of the controversial and womanizing landowner Versilov. A focus of the novel is the recurring conflict between father and son, particularly in ideology, which represents the battles between the conventional "old" way of thinking in the 1840s and the new nihilistic point of view of the youth of 1860s Russia. The young of Arkady's time embraced a very negative opinion of Russian culture in contrast to Western or European culture.

Another main theme is Arkady's development and utilization of his "idea" in his life, mainly a form of rebellion against society (and his father) through the rejection of attending a university, and the making of money and living independently, onto the eventual aim of becoming excessively wealthy and powerful.

The question of emancipation or what to do with the newly freed serfs in the face of the corrupting influence of the West looms over the novel. Arkady's mother is a former serf and Versilov is a landowner and understanding their relationship is ultimately at the center of Arkady's quest to find out who Versilov is and what he did to his mother. Answering the question of emancipation, in Dostoevsky's novel, has to do with how to educate the serfs and address the damage of Petrine reforms in order to construct a new Russian identity.

The novel was written and serially published while Leo Tolstoy was publishing Anna Karenina. Dostoevsky's novel about the "accidental family" stands in contrast to Tolstoy's novel about the aristocratic Russian family.

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