List of Figures
Acknowledgments
A Note from the Editors
Introduction: The De-seriousification of Dostoevsky
Lynn Ellen Patyk, Dartmouth College, USA
1. Bakhtin and the Laughing Genres on the Brink of Total War
Caryl Emerson, Princeton University, USA
2. Funny Dostoevsky in Translation: How Funny Is He?
Tatyana Kovalevskaya, Russian State University for the Humanities, Russia
3. Raskolnikov's Red Nose: The Slapstick Comedy of Dostoevsky's Serious Protagonists
Fiona Bell, Yale University, USA
4. Sensations of Laughter: Mind and Matter in The Brothers Karamazov
Melissa Frazier, Sarah Lawrence College, USA
5. Having the Last Laugh: Ontological Jokes and Dostoevsky's Comedic Genius
Alina Wyman, New College of Florida, USA
6. "Too Dragged Out, Can't Understand a Thing": The Impatience of Youth in Demons
Chloe Papadopoulos, Yale University, USA
7. Restorative Parody from Devils to Hamilton
Susanne Fusso, Wesleyan University, USA
8. The Funny and the Furious: Laughter and Gender in Dostoevsky
Irina Erman, College of Charleston, USA
Notes on Contributors
Index