The Art of Dostoevsky's Falling SicknessUniversity of Wisconsin--Madison, 2008 - 217 Seiten |
Inhalt
Falling Sickness and the Fantastic in The Landlady | 9 |
Intersecting Nervous Disorders in The Insulted and the Injured | 40 |
Falling Sickness and the Angelic Eunuch in The Idiot | 74 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
affliction artistic associated atheism behavior Brothers Karamazov castration Catteau chapter characters Chizh claims connotations convulsive seizure cure delirium demonic possession describe diagnosis disease divine doctors Dostoevsky read Dostoevsky suffered Dostoevsky's depiction Dostoevsky's epilepsy early nervous disorder epileptic attacks epileptic fit epileptic seizure epileptic symptoms Esquirol eternal harmony European evokes experience falling sickness fantastic fear Fedotov Frank Fyodor Grigory hallucinations Herpin identified idiocy Idiot indicate Injured Insulted interpretation Ivan Petrovich Katerina Kirillov Landlady Larissa Volokhonsky Leatherbarrow letter medical history medical literature medical realism Moritz Heinrich Romberg motif murder Murin Murin's seizure Myshkin mystical horror narrative Nastasya Nastasya Filippovna Nelly Nelly's nervous disorder novel onset Ordynov passage Petersburg petit mal seizures physical plot portrait potential pre-epileptic aura prince prison psychological Rice Richard Pevear Riesenkampf Rogozhin Romberg Russian sensation sexual Shatov shriek Smerdyakov Smerdyakov's epilepsy specialists spectacle Stavrogin story supernatural symbolism Temkin treatment violence writes Yanovsky Yanovsky's