Was Dostoevsky a nihilist?
Rachel Davis
Updated on March 11, 2026
Dostoyevsky urged Russians to rediscover their native roots and Christian Orthodox ideals, eschewing the Western ideologies that he saw as infecting Russian society. Through his novel Crime and Punishment, Dostoyevsky targeted
Russian nihilism
In Russian, the word nigilizm (Russian: нигилизм; meaning 'nihilism', from Latin nihil 'nothing at all') came to represent the movement's negation of pre-existing ideals.
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