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The Idiot Allusions & Cultural References

When authors refer to other great works, people, and events, it’s usually not accidental. Put on your super-sleuth hat and figure out why.

  • Nikolai Karamzin, History of the Russian State
  • Nikolai Karamzin, Letters of a Russian Traveler
  • Russian Orthodox Spiritual Literature ("Menaions")
  • Alexander Pushkin, "On Arakcheev"
  • Alexander Pushkin, "The Poor Knight" [We couldn't find a good site about this poem—if you can dig up something, let us know.]
  • Victor Hugo, "The Last Day of a Man Condemned to Death"
  • M. P. Pogodin, "Samples of Old Slavonic-Russian Calligraphy"
  • William Shakespeare, Romeo and Juliet (translated by M. N. Katkov)
  • Apuleius, The Golden Ass
  • Mikhail Lermontov, "The Journalist, the Reader, and the Writer"
  • Friedrich Schiller, Cabal and Love
  • Alexandre Dumas père, The Three Musketeers
  • The New Testament of the Bible, almost all the Books
  • Heinrich Heine, The History of Religion and Philosophy in Germany
  • Alexandre Dumas fils, La Dame aux Camelias
  • Sergei Solovyov, History of Russia from Ancient Times
  • Alexander Griboedov, Woe from Wit
  • N. G. Chernyshevsky, What Is to Be Done?
  • Blaise Pascal, Thoughts on Religion and on Several Other Subjects
  • Nikolai Gogol, The Marriage
  • Nikolai Gogol, "Nevsky Prospect"
  • Nikolai Gogol, "Dead Souls"
  • Moliere, George Dandin
  • Alexander Herzen, From My Past and Thought
  • Cervantes, Don Quixote
  • Voltaire 
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Paul de Kock 
  • Jean-Jacques Rousseau

Historical References

  • The Bolshoi (Mariinksy) Opera Theater in St. Petersburg
  • The Great Horde (the Mongol Empire)
  • "The Beheading of John the Baptist" (painting by Hans Fries)
  • The Crimean War (1853-56)
  • Danilov, a murderer whose crime was very similar to that of Raskolnikov in Crime and Punishment (the real-life crime came after the novel)
  • Mazurin, a murderer who killed a jeweler with a razor
  • Gorsky, a murderer who killed the family of the boy he was tutoring
  • Balabanov, a murderer who killed a tradesman for his watch
  • Lacenaire, a famous, vicious, and sadistic murderer (and poet)
  • The Comtesse du Barry, mistress of Louis XV
  • "Christ's Body in the Tomb" (painting by Holbein)
  • Pierre-Joseph Proudhon, French social theorist and anarchist who coined the phrase, "Property is theft!"
  • Pushkin's duel with George d'Anthes 
  • Napoleon (you might have heard of him)
  • The Battle of Waterloo
  • The War of 1812
  • The Freemasons
  • The Jesuit Order
  • Talleyrand, French statesman and famously brilliant tactician