Young Khawam (Russian: Podrostok), also published under two other names (Youth) and (Random Family), is a novel by the great Russian writer Theodore Dostoyevsky. The first publication of this book was published in part by part and monthly in 1875 in ...
Young Khawam (Russian: Podrostok), also published under two other names (Youth) and (Random Family), is a novel by the great Russian writer Theodore Dostoyevsky. The first publication of this book was published in part by part and monthly in 1875 in the publishing house of Watan Notes. The book tells the story of a 19-year-old intellectual named Arkady Dolgroki. Arkady is the illegitimate son of a wealthy landowner. The main focus of the story is on the discussions and the continuous intellectual conflict between this father and son, which basically expresses the ideological debates between the two traditional ideas of thinking in the 1940s and the new Nihilistic view of 1960s Russia. This is while the young people of the Arcadian period accepted the very negative thoughts of the Russian culture, which was in contrast with the European culture of that time. Another main topic of the book is education and how to apply Arcadia's thinking in his life, which he shows by refusing to go to university and earn money and forming an independent life, which depicts a form of rebellion against society. The book consists of three parts, each part narrates the events of three days. Dostoyevsky's life as a writer revolved around an important theme called freedom. The author concludes that freedom is one of the most valuable possessions, but the abuse of freedom leads to chaos, as does the conscious choice of evil. In the book "The Idiot", Dossatevsky shows how the legitimacy obtained by money can lead to the disintegration of the family and society.
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