ENGSiblings in Tolstoy and Dostoevsky is the first book about siblings in Russian literature. Combining close readings with diverse theoretical perspectives on kinship, attachment, and brotherhood, the book offers a new understanding of love, family, and the way these intimate topics constitute the core of Tolstoy and Dostoevskys philosophical and religious ideals in their major novels. Berman shows how these two great writers built upon their conceptions of the literal sibling bondthat is, intimacy without the dangers of Erosto arrive at their ideals of universal brotherhood. In the nineteenth-century, between two major revolutions (French and Russian) where brotherhood was a central tenant and rallying cry, ideas about siblinghood and its expansive potential were not merely family concerns, but of social and political significance. Russia's more inclusive conception of family ties made possible an extension of intimate family ties to the spiritual unity of the human family. The books conclusion discusses other Russian and British family novelists, situating Tolstoy and Dostoevskys treatment of siblings in its literary context, and making Siblings in Tolstoy and Dostoevsky an important resource for scholars of the family novel.RUS . . . . . . , , . , , , , . , , , : .