Criminal Plot in the Russian Literature
- Authors: Markuntsov S.1
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Affiliations:
- National Research University Higher School of Economics
- Issue: Vol 15, No 4 (2022)
- Pages: 236-242
- Section: Review
- URL: https://ogarev-online.ru/2072-8166/article/view/318211
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.17323/2072-8166.2022.4.236.242
- ID: 318211
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Abstract
The review analyzes a monograph Criminal plot in the Russian literature (Moscow: Prospekt, 2021, 640 p.), written by Anatoly V. Naumov, a lawyer and outstanding researcher in the field of criminal law. In the reviewed book the scientist makes an attempt to explain the phenomenon of criminal through the disclosure of related criminal, criminological, philosophical and other basic problems, through the prism of a detailed study of a huge number of criminal plots contained in the works of the great Russian literature. In the context of such a study, the author refers to the works of more than 80 writers of Russian Empire, Soviet Union and of the contemporary Russia.
About the authors
Sergey Markuntsov
National Research University Higher School of Economics
Email: noreply@hse.ru
ORCID iD: 0000-0001-8473-7314
Doctor of Sciences (Law), Professor
References
- Klebanov L.R. (2006) The criminal and crime on pages of fiction. Moscow: Wolters Kluwer, 144 p. (in Russ.)
- Klebanov L.R. (2021) Qualification of crimes in the plots of fiction. Moscow: Norma, 230 p. (in Russ.)
- Naumov A.V. (2006) Revolutionary extremism and terrorism in Fyodor Dostoevsky's novel “Demons”. Zakonnost'=Legality, no. 5, pp. 46-50 (in Russ.)
- Naumov A.V. (2017) Criminal plot in Michail Bulgakov's novel “Master and Margarita”. Rossiyskaya yusticiya=Russian Justice, no. 2, pp. 69-72 (in Russ.)
- Naumov A.V. (2021) Posthumously defendant. Moscow: Prospect, 320 p. (in Russ.)
- Safronova E. Yu. (2013) Legal discourse in the works of F. M. Dostoevsky 1846-1862. Barnaul: Altay University Press, 182 p. (in Russ.)
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