Classics and the Western Canon discussion

This topic is about
Crime and Punishment
Dostoevsky, Crime and Punishment
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Part Two, Chap 1-4
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Ahh...thanks for pointing that out!

Yes, I've got a similar impression from all I've read by D. so far.

What is the reason?

What is the reason?"
The jesuits seem to have a long history of suppression:
Jesuits were supported by Empress Catherine the Great, a patron of learning, who welcomed exiled Jesuits to Russia in 1773 after their expulsion from other parts of Europe. The order of dissolution was delayed in the Russian Empire until long after her death, when the Society had been reinstated in other places. Under pressure from the Russian Orthodox Church, Tsar Alexander I exiled the Jesuits in 1820.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suppres...

All of this has to be seen in light of the Great East-West Schism of 1054 between the Orthodox Churches and the Roman Catholic Church.
The Jesuits were founded in the 16th century to primarily be an order engaged in evangelization, to counter-act Protestantism. And they were successful in many places. Not all, Protestantism is still around :)
Now Russia is already Christian, Christian Orthodox is just as apostolic as Roman Catholicism, so from their perspective, why would they need Catholic proselytizers with whom they have a rocky relationship to begin with?
I think now we are much closer now to re-uniting than we were in centuries past. During Dostoevsky's time this was a sore spot.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Varieties of Religious Experience (other topics)Are Men Necessary?: When Sexes Collide (other topics)
The bar conversation took place 1.5 months before the events at the very beginning of the story. Part One Chap 6 Paragraph 2: "But R. had lately become superstitious... About a month and a half ago he had remembered the address." That was when he first met the pawnbroker, and right after that first encounter he overheard the bar conversation.