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Dostoevsky and Soloviev : the art of integral vision

Part of the Russian Literature & Thought S. series
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This is the first book in any language to examine the friendship and the interrelated thought of two giants of Russian culture: Fedor Dostoevsky (1821-1881), one of Russia's greatest novelists, and Vladimir Soloviev (1853-1900), Russia's most influential philosopher.

Marina Kostalevsky provides biographical details and a wide-ranging comparative analysis of their principal works from philosophical, literary, historical, and religious perspectives.

For Soloviev and, even more, Dostoevsky, the tasks of literature and philosophy so converged that their writings marked a significantly new level of unity in these fields, argues Kostalevsky.

This unity became the source of a vital and continuing current in Russian philosophical and artistic thought, seen today in the uneasy post-Soviet process of restoring the cultural tradition of the pre-Soviet past.

Kostalevsky discusses the intricate interaction between Dostoevsky and Soloviev, focusing on their philosophical and novelistic treatments of the themes of Godmanhood, theocracy, and ethics.

She contends that Soloviev's vision of the world -- a vision grounded in the Christian religion and built on the general idea of Godmanhood -- is paralleled in Dostoevsky's major works.

Further, she finds that Soloviev's own interpretation of Dostoevsky inaugurated a Russian tradition of Dostoevsky criticism that culminates in the work of Mikhail Bakhtin. "Kostalevsky is a genuinely independent thinker and scholar.

Her provocative study introduces the all-important worldview of Soloviev and for the first time in English explores how Dostoevsky's works are shaped by this worldview.

This is a major accomplishment". -- Richard F. Gustafson, ColumbiaUniversity

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Product Details
Yale University Press
0300060963 / 9780300060966
Hardback
891.733
14/10/1997
United States
English
240p.
postgraduate /research & professional /undergraduate Learn More