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The Optina Pustyn Monastery in the Russian Literary Imagination : Iconic Vision in Works by Dostoevsky, Gogol, Tolstoy, and Others

Part of the Middlebury Studies in Russian Language and Literature series
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Between 1821 and 1891, the Optina Pustyn Monastery of Konzel'sk, in Russia's Kaluga Government, was the site of an unprecedented - and as yet unequaled - period of religious and literary flowering.

Optina Pustyn was a mecca for many of Russia's most prominent writers and thinkers.

Distinguished visitors included Ivan Kireevsky, Nikolai Gogol, Fyodor Dostoevsky, and Lev Tolstoy.

This study explains why Optina and its renowned elders held a special attraction to Russia's literary giants.

It reveals how the elders' use of language was rooted in the iconic vision of Optina's fifteen-hundred-year-old tradition of contemplative monasticism.

It is the first study to examine Optina's social gravity against the broad background of nineteenth-century institutions of Church and Intelligentsia.

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£63.10
Product Details
Peter Lang Publishing Inc
0820416975 / 9780820416977
Hardback
01/12/1995
United States
308 pages
610 grams