Lexington Books
Pages: 450
Trim: 6½ x 9½
978-0-7391-2533-5 • Hardback • April 2008 • $162.00 • (£125.00)
978-0-7391-4075-8 • Paperback • July 2009 • $70.99 • (£55.00)
978-0-7391-4076-5 • eBook • July 2009 • $67.00 • (£52.00)
Inessa Medzhibovskaya is assistant professor of literature at the Eugene Lang College of the New School.
Chapter 1 Table of Contents
Chapter 2 Dedication
Chapter 3 Epigraph
Chapter 4 Preface and Acknowledgements
Chapter 5 Introduction
Chapter 6 I
Chapter 7 1 Challenges of Modernity: The Russian Vertigo in Personal Experience and Literature to 1847
Chapter 8 2 Portrait of the Artist as a Young Nonbeliever
Chapter 9 3 Superfluity and the Religion of Writing (1852-1863)
Chapter 10 4 Belief System in War and Peace
Chapter 11 5 The Unfinished Battle: The Case with the Epilogues
Chapter 12 6 Tolstoy's Path toward Conversion: 1869-1875
Chapter 13 II
Chapter 14 7 The Course of Tolstoy's Conversion: From Philosophy to Christ (1875-1878)
Chapter 15 8 Turning with Christ
Chapter 16 9 Religious Experience and Forms of Accounting
Chapter 17 10 Logos and Its Life in the World
Chapter 18 11The Death of Ivan Il'ich
Chapter 19 12On Life and Conclusion
Chapter 20 Appendix I: On Prayer
Chapter 21 Appendix II: Prayer of Granddaughter Sonechka; Prayer (1909)
Chapter 22 Bibliography
With this authoritative and revealing study of Tolstoy's quest for faith, based on his every word and placed in its appropriate Russian and Western philosophical context, Inessa Medzhibovskaya emerges as the leading Tolstoy scholar of her generation in Russia and the West....
— Richard Gustafson
Tolstoy's spiritual conversion?severed from its rich European contexts and unjustly reduced to guilt, moral epiphany, pathology, personal caprice, fear of death?has remained the greatest puzzle of his life and career. This marvelous book reconnects Tolstoy with his culture by following, step by step and over four decades, his quest for 'reasonable necessity and conscious freedom,' in a story that expands the conversion moment from a singular threshold into a vast, fraught, thrilling terrain....
— Caryl Emerson
Tolstoy and the Religious Cutlure of His Time is an important book on several levels. It offers a beautifully scholarly examination of Tolstoy's thinking on faith that gives us new readings of both his philosophy and his literary works, while also offering an exploration of faith, doubt, and conversion in nineteenth-century Russia. Medzhibovskaya explores Tolstoy's movement towards conversion within a rich variety of contexts. She offers a highly detailed profile of the complex environment in which Tolstoy came of age as a thinker, an environment that incorporated Western philosophy, Orthodox theology, and the Russian literary and political tradition. She also puts Tolstoy's conversion within the context of contemporary theories of how conversions work. Tolstoy and the Religious Culture of His Time offers a fresh, powerful, and convincing reading of Tolstoy's life, work, and faith. Grounded in careful, thorough scholarship, it provides us with a way of thinking about Tolstoy that is ultimately new. It is a must-read not only for Tolstoy scholars, but also for anyone interested in Orthodoxy, doubt, and conversion.
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This book is indeed a very detailed intellectual-or rather philosophical-biography of Tolstoi, from the age of 17-59. . . . The quantity and thoroughness of Medzhibovskaya's research are stupendous.
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Critics usually treat Tolstoy's frequent references in his writings before 1880 to God and religion as unself-conscious cultural clichés or occasional swallows that do not make a spring. In Tolstoy and the Religious Culture of his Time, Inessa Medzhibovskaya weaves such references into a retelling of Tolstoy's life and works from beginning to end. Neither traditional Orthodox Christian nor doubting Western philosopher, Medzhibovskaya's Tolstoy employs all available weapons in a lifelong struggle with faith very relevant to readers today...
— Donna Orwin