Authors
Katya Jordan1; 1 Brigham Young University, United States Discussion
In a letter to A.N. Maikov, Dostoevsky explains that he envisions Stepan Trofimovich Verkhovensky at once as a “secondary personage” and “the cornerstone” of his novel Demons. Strictly speaking, Verkhovensky represents a Russian liberal of the 1840s. As such, he is an ideological precursor of the “nechaevism” of a subsequent generation, but a closer investigation of this character’s words and actions suggests that Dostoevsky casts this character as a Christ figure in a travestied form. Dostoevsky structures Demons as a chronicle, within which Verhovensky’s story line contains some hagiographical elements that depict a life of a saint in a secular world. While many of Stepan Verkhovensky’s actions are allusions to Christ’s actions, they often have a negative value, making his life the opposite of imitatio Christi. Because Stepan Verkhovensky systematically inverts Christ’s attributes and actions, he fails in his role as a father, a teacher, and, ultimately, a savior. The purpose of this paper is to analyze the character construction of Stepan Trofimovich Verkhovensky to uncover the ideological genealogy of the novel’s characters.