![]() ![]() There are a lot of social references in the story as well as satirically intended conversations about economic theory. He feels he will attract a lot of attention as the man inside the crocodile and he can give his views on politics and economics to the world. ![]() It turns out Ivan is quite comfortable in side the beast and has no urgent wish to leave. Ivan's wife insists that the crocodile be cut open to release her husband but the German refuses permission for this unless he is paid a huge price for him as he feels the crocodile will attract a lot more customers now that he has a a life person inside him. Ivan begins to tease the crocodile and he ends up inside the stomach of the crocodile which he finds quite comfortable. The story is told in the first person about what happens after the narrator's friend, Ivan Matveich, is swallowed alive by a crocodile that was being shown in a sort of traveling zoo run by a German and his wife. "The Crocodile" by Fyodor Dostoyevsky (1821 to 1881-Russia) is flat out strange! If I had read this work not knowing who wrote it and been asked to guess the author I would have first guessed Franz Kafka, then Nikolai Gogol, then I would have been wide open who might be but I think I would not have guessed the author's name for a long time. "The Crocodile" by Fyodor Dostoyevsky (1865, 34 pages, translated by Constance Garnett) ![]()
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