A Guided Reading of the Brothers Karamazov: Dostoevsky at his Best with Dr. Jeffrey Brooks, PhD

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Lifelong Learning LogoCourse Title: A Guided Reading of the Brothers Karamazov: Dostoevsky at his Best

Instructor: Dr. Jeffrey Brooks

Brought to you by Odyssey  

August 26, 2025 - September 30, 2025 (6 Sessions) 

Tuesday,  6:00PM ET - 7:30PM ET 

Virtual via Zoom

 

Course Description: The Brothers Karamazov is Dostoevsky’s supreme achievement. Students will consider Dostoevsky’s invention of the psychological novel and his unique ideas of freedom, suffering, and Love. Characters include papa Karamazov, the debauched patriarch; Ivan, the self-destructive atheist, Dmitry, the prisoner of passion, and Alyosha, the saintly family fool, as well Grushenka, the most famous and seductive of Dostoevsky’s women. Students will also read Dostoevsky’s Notes from the Underground. In conjunction with reading the novel, students will watch the 8 episodes of Vladimir Khotinenko’s much praised film Dostoevsky (2011, Russian Channel one) with English subtitles.  The assigned text is Michael Katz’s much praised new translation. The online sessions will clarify any confusion about the characters, fill in the context, and share views about the material.  

Materials:

The Brothers Karamazov: trans. Pevear and Volkonsky, translators. Use only this translation.

Vladimir Khotinenko’s Russian Channel one Dostoevsky 2011 with English subtitles. Available on Amazon Prime Video

Suggested supplementary material week 6: Dostoevsky’s Notes from the Underground. Vintage. Peaver and Volkhonsky translation

The Brothers Karamazov, the 1958 Hollywood film starring Yul Brynner, directed by Richard 

Brooks. Available for rent on Amazon 1.99.

In conjunction with reading the novel, students will watch the 8 episodes of Vladimir Khotinenko’s much praised film Dostoevsky (2011, Russian Channel one) with English subtitles available on Amazon.

*Top Rated Instructor*

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Johns Hopkins Tuition Remission Policies 

Johns Hopkins alumni, staff, faculty and their spouse or domestic partners are eligible for tuition remission for Odyssey lifelong learning courses. Select the correct ticket pricing during registration. If we cannot confirm your eligibility, you will be requested to pay the full registration price for the course.  Eligibility details can be found here.

Withdrawals & Refunds:

If a course is canceled or closed, the registrant is notified immediately, and a full refund is processed automatically unless another course is requested. Registrants who wish to withdraw from an active course must complete the online Odyssey Refund Request Form. Attach any documentation to support your request (e.g., medical documentation, family crisis documentation, etc.).

  • 100% refund: Prior to the start of the course and after the first class.
  • No refunds: After the first week of each course unless in exceptional cases.

For single-session courses:
100% refundable within two (2) business days of the event.

Please note, refunds apply only to the tuition portion of an Odyssey participant’s charges and are not applicable to any fees or gifts made to the Johns Hopkins Alumni Association. Registrants will be notified by email if a refund is approved within five (5) business days.

ABOUT Jeffrey Brooks (Ph.D)
Professor, History

I study and teach the political and cultural history of modern Russia, the history of the Soviet-American Cold War, and the great works of Russian and Soviet culture in their contemporary context. My The Firebird and the Fox: Russian Culture under Tsars and Bolsheviks (Cambridge University Press, 2019) showcases the genius of Russian literature, art, music, and dance over a century of turmoil within the dynamic cultural ecosystem that shaped it. The Firebird and the Fox explores the shared traditions, mutual influences, and enduring themes that recur in these art forms from 1850-1950. The book uses two emblematic characters from Russian culture—the firebird, symbol of the transcendent power of art in defiance of circumstance and the efforts of censors to contain creativity; and the fox, usually female and representing wit, cleverness and the agency of artists and everyone who triumphs over adversity—to explore how Russian cultural life changed over the period. High culture drew on folk and popular genres, then in turn influences an expanding commercial culture.

My research has been supported by The Guggenheim Foundation, the Fulbright-Hays Program, The National Endowment for the Humanities, the Woodrow Wilson Center, the National Council for Soviet and East European Research, and the IREX Academy Exchange, among others.

I received the Johns Hopkins Alumni Association Excellence in Teaching Award in Arts and Sciences in 2004.

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 Event Date
Starts:
Tuesday, August 26, 2025
6:00pm EDT

Ends:
Tuesday, September 30, 2025
7:30pm EDT

 Contact
Odyssey
1-800-JHU-JHU1 (548-5481)
odyssey@jhu.edu

$
50% discount. Alumni status will be confirmed.
$
80% discount. Employment status will be confirmed.
$
50% discount. Employment status of Spouse/Domestic Partner will be confirmed.
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