Dostoevsky: Language, Faith, and FictionA&C Black, 2008-01-01 - 290 psl. This is an extraordinary book, which through the lens of Dostoevsky's novels enables the reader to consider the nature of God in the 21st century - a societal landscape fraught with tensions and social inequalities. |
Turinys
Introduction | 1 |
1 Christ against the Truth? | 15 |
Being toward Death | 63 |
3 The Last Word? Dialogue and Recognition | 111 |
Responsibility for All | 151 |
The Broken Image | 189 |
Conclusion | 227 |
Notes | 245 |
269 | |
279 | |
Kiti leidimai - Peržiūrėti viską
Pagrindiniai terminai ir frazės
acceptance actual Alyosha Alyosha Karamazov atheist Bakhtin becomes believe biblical Brothers Karamazov chap chapter character Christ Christian claim commitment confession context Crime and Punishment death decision demonic Devil diabolical dialogue discussion divine Dosto Dostoevsky Dostoevskys fiction Dostoevskys Poetics echoes Evdokimov evskys fact faith father Ferapont final freedom Fyodor Gary Saul Morson Gods holy human icon Idiot imagination incarnate Inquisitor Ivan Ivan Karamazov Ivans Karamazov kind Kirillov Lizaveta means Mitya moral murder Myshkin narrative narrator Nastasya novel novelist ones Orthodox Paissy person possible presented Problems of Dostoevskys Pyotr question radical Raskolnikov reader reality reconciliation refusal relation religious Rogozhin Rowan Williams Russian seen sense Shatov significant simply Smerdyakov someone Sonya sort speak spiritual Stavrogin Stepan Trofimovich story suffering suicide taking responsibility theme theological things Tikhon Tikhon of Zadonsk tion truth Underground Vaudeville Verkhovensky vision words Writers Diary Zosima