Mon, 12 Jan 26 Talk

The Psychology of Guilt | A Bridge to the Classics

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   Online

   07:30 PM - 08:30 PM

   Free Admission



About the Programme 

Can redemption follow crime? Is morality absolute? 

  

In shadowy St. Petersburg, a brutal double murder shocks the city. The prime suspect? A quiet, impoverished ex-student named Raskolnikov teetering between confession and collapse. Detective Porfiry is not interested in hard evidence alone though – he’s chasing the truth hiding in a fractured mind. Join us as we dig beyond the crime into the enigmas of guilt, morality and redemption in Dostoevsky’s Crime and Punishment

 

About Season 7: What It Means to be Human 

What does it mean to truly live? Do we control our destiny, or are we prisoners of circumstance? How do we find meaning in suffering?  

  

Russian literature tackles these universal questions head-on. From Tolstoy's sweeping epics that inspired modern writers like Zadie Smith, to Dostoevsky's psychological masterpieces that still get referenced in criminal psychology courses, these authors have laid bare the human soul with unflinching honesty. Join Season 7 of A Bridge to the Classics as we explore love, suffering, morality, and meaning through some of literature's most passionate and philosophical stories.  

 

About the Speaker 

Dr Olga Sobolev is Director of the Language, Culture and Society Programme at the London School of Economics and Political Science. Her research interests lie in comparative studies and concern nineteenth- and twentieth-century Russian and European culture. She has published extensively in the field of comparative literature, as well as on the writings of Tolstoy, Dostoevsky, Turgenev, and Chekhov, including the recent books and chapters in the edited volumes: Film Adaptations of Russian Classic (2024), ‘Vekhi  - the Russian Intelligentsia at a Crossroads’ (2025), ‘Tolstoi’s Resurrection on the Russian Stage’ (2021), Anna Karenina- the Ways of Seeing (2021). 

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Online



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