Answer Block
Anna Karenina Chapter 25 is a mid-novel chapter that amplifies conflict between central figures, tying personal choices to broader 19th-century Russian social norms. It marks a turning point where characters confront the irreversible consequences of their actions. No fabricated quotes or page numbers are included to respect copyright.
Next step: List 3 ways this chapter’s events connect to a theme you’ve already studied in the novel, such as love and. duty.
Key Takeaways
- This chapter escalates core character conflicts that drive the novel’s climax
- It reinforces the novel’s critique of rigid social expectations for women
- Small, intimate character interactions signal large, irreversible narrative shifts
- Chapter 25 sets up the novel’s final exploration of guilt and regret
20-Minute Plan and 60-Minute Plan
20-minute plan
- Review your class notes for Anna Karenina up to Chapter 24, focusing on unresolved character conflicts
- Read a high-level summary of Chapter 25 (use your class text or a trusted education site) and mark 2 key narrative beats
- Draft one discussion question that links these beats to a novel-wide theme
60-minute plan
- Re-read Anna Karenina Chapter 25, pausing to highlight 4 lines that reveal character motivation (no direct quotes—paraphrase instead)
- Map these 4 moments to 2 of the novel’s major themes, writing 1-sentence explanations for each link
- Draft a 3-sentence thesis statement for a possible essay about this chapter’s narrative role
- Practice explaining your thesis out loud as if you were presenting it in class
3-Step Study Plan
1. Pre-Reading Prep
Action: Review your notes on the 3 most pressing character conflicts from the previous 10 chapters
Output: A 3-item list of unresolved conflicts to track during your reading
2. Active Reading
Action: Read Chapter 25, marking moments where conflicts escalate or resolve (use paraphrases only)
Output: A 2-column chart linking character actions to thematic ideas
3. Post-Reading Synthesis
Action: Connect Chapter 25’s events to the novel’s opening scenes, noting parallels in character behavior
Output: A 4-sentence reflection paragraph for your study notebook