The Russian Concept of Work: Suffering, Drama, and Tradition in Pre- and Post-Revolutionary RussiaBloomsbury Academic, 24/10/1995 - 184 من الصفحات A fresh look at Russian society, this book examines Russian attitudes towards work, particularly with respect to cultural values, and socioeconomic and related political behavior. The book begins with a discussion of the historical development of the Russian perceptions of work as a complex process of negotiations between the Russian and his contemporary social institutions and practices. Examples from contemporary culture and the arts are used as a backdrop for the discussion. Using cultural history and works of art as a means to view a non-Western route to modernization, the author provides fresh, original insight into understanding the challenges of contemporary Russian society. |
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الصفحة 14
... past . The second voice can be heard in the revolutionary maxim of struggle against the existing political and socioeconomic reality ; it is the call for hope , which I call the voice of the future . Lurking behind those two maxims ...
... past . The second voice can be heard in the revolutionary maxim of struggle against the existing political and socioeconomic reality ; it is the call for hope , which I call the voice of the future . Lurking behind those two maxims ...
الصفحة 40
... past and the Orthodox belief expounded by St. Niphon , who had asserted in Izmaragd , a book for the laity in ancient Russia , that " nobody is saved by pleas , men are saved or condemned by deeds " ( Fedotov 1946 , 49 ) . As for ...
... past and the Orthodox belief expounded by St. Niphon , who had asserted in Izmaragd , a book for the laity in ancient Russia , that " nobody is saved by pleas , men are saved or condemned by deeds " ( Fedotov 1946 , 49 ) . As for ...
الصفحة 126
... past . But it is possible to read Mahogany as an endorsement of revolutionary change , a plea for rebellion and an attack upon the suffocating conventions of traditional society . This duality of perception , in the form which Pil ...
... past . But it is possible to read Mahogany as an endorsement of revolutionary change , a plea for rebellion and an attack upon the suffocating conventions of traditional society . This duality of perception , in the form which Pil ...
المحتوى
Introduction | 1 |
The Case against the Present | 23 |
Tolstoy Bulgakov Berdyayev | 35 |
حقوق النشر | |
8 من الأقسام الأخرى غير ظاهرة
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
altruistic ambition Andreev Andrei belief Berdyayev Bolshevik Bukharin Bulgakov Bunin capitalist celebration challenge Chekhov contemporary context Dasha death despair economic efficiency evil feeling Geertz Gladkov Gleb Gorky Gorky's gusli heroic deed holy fools ibid industrialization intellectual intelligentsia ironic irony Ivan Babichev Ivan Dmitrievich Ivan's Kataev Kuz'ma labor Lenin Leonid Andreev Lev Tolstoy literary Makarenko martyr Marx's Marxist meaning metaphor modernization moral mundane native image nature negotiated Nikolai Berdyayev notion Olesha pain passion of Christ peasant Pedagogical Poem Pelageia physical Pil'niak political purposeful human activity Raskol rationality redemption reveals revolution Russian Christian Russian cultural Russian Orthodox Russian perception Russian revolutionary Russian tradition sacrifice sense of hope Sergei Bulgakov social change social reality socialist society Soviet spiritual Stalin Stalin's suffering and self-sacrifice surrender symbol theory Tikhon tion Tolstoy Tolstoy's Tolstoyan traditional Russian universal salvation Valentin Kataev violence vision of communist Vladimir Lenin voice Vrubel's War Communism Western conceptions workers