Ulrich is Raskolnikov, but actually nuanced.Instead of being a poor, law school dropout out, he was by all accounts a gifted intellectual, rich, and a part of the aristocracy, who had every reason to consider himself superior to the common folk, yet ends up as a loser unable to fulfill any sort of destiny. Any notion of being a great man is thrown out the window and his attempts to rebel against society are just portrayed as childish outbursts, yet understandable. Meanwhile Raskolnikov was a poor loser who sperged out and quickly realized he was wrong.
>>24716665>quickly realized he was wrongRaskolnikov was in denial about why he was wrong until the Epilogue
>>24716665Should've fucked his sister IMO
I want to fuck Sonechka
>>24717228The book is short and his guilt starts kicking in quickly, he’s coping and seething for most of the book.
>>24717228Yes, but he realises *that* he was wrong very quickly.
>>24716665Has anyone read this in German? If so, how is his style? Is it endurable for the standards of German modernism?