A person’s
attire and physique is where we get our first, fleeting, but lasting
impression. The outward appearances of Crime
and Punishment characters in the descriptions are detailed and rather
exhaustive. This helps us almost visualize a persona we have never seen. I
think Dostoevsky uses the wardrobe, jewelry and hairstyle of his characters to
make readers maybe involuntarily, but all the same, make assumptions and
conclusions before they actually “meet” the character. He then, as the book
progresses, either proves those wrong or right. I think this is done in order
to demonstrate the menace of quick and shallow judgment. Characters like Luzhin
seem respectable at first glance, but through the novel become despicable. And
although the first presentation of Sonya is obscene and “adorned in street
fashion with a clearly and shamefully explicit purpose” (page 183), with time
we see an unexpected and unconventional hallo form over her.
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