Good for the Souls: A History of Confession in the Russian Empire: Oxford Studies in Modern European History
Autor Nadieszda Kizenkoen Limba Engleză Hardback – 21 apr 2021
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780192896797
ISBN-10: 0192896792
Pagini: 344
Dimensiuni: 163 x 240 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.72 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Seria Oxford Studies in Modern European History
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 0192896792
Pagini: 344
Dimensiuni: 163 x 240 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.72 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Seria Oxford Studies in Modern European History
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
Recenzii
Contrary to the cliché, Nadieszda Kizenko shows that the History of Confession in the Russian Empire is not just the history of a state instrument of control, but a dynamic process that took different forms under different regents. At the same time, it is about an Orthodox practice that was also used by the population to create their own narratives (e.g. by elite women). Kizenko draws on an impressive wealth of textual sources that demonstrate the diverse aspects of the subject matter
This book represents a significant advance in our understanding of confession in the Russian Empire. It has no equivalent in either English or Russian and it opens up to the English-speaking world the hidden world of Russian confession, showing its peculiarities and its convergence with Western traditions. One of the many strengths of Kizenko's work is exposition of the level of interaction between the Western Churches and the Russian Orthodox Church, mediated through Kyiv. Magisterial new book...based on an impressive array of archival sources belonging to both the Church and the State, supplemented by diaries, letters and memoirs.
Nadieszda Kizenko's Good for the Souls: A History of Confession in the Russian Empire is arguably the most important contribution to this historiographical development since its inception, a development which was partially initiated by Kizenko's groundbreaking study of Ioann of Kronstadt (2000) and which has been sustained and broadened by Kizenko in an array of probing articles and essays about liturgy, gender, and confession, the subject of her new book.
This book offers a thorough, engagingly written history of confession in the Russian Empire. Drawing on impressively wide-ranging research in central and provincial Russian archives and engaging the historiography of Christianity beyond the Russian Empire, Kizenko traces the evolution of confession through the collapse of the empire in 1917.
Good for the Souls represents a key intervention in our understanding of Orthodoxy in the Russian Empire and of the sacrament of forgiveness in the Orthodox Church. Based on Kizenko's detailed consideration of confession over three centuries, it will undoubtedly become the standard work on this question.
Nadieszda Kizenko's masterful history of confession in Russia offers a pathway toward understanding the cultural ramifications of confession for that seventeenth-century divide and for the modern Russian Empire that followed. It is a must-read for students of cultural and religious studies, of early modern Europe, and of Russian history.
This reviewer cannot recommend Kizenko's book enough: it is simply a must for all academics (even, or perhaps especially, for those who do not usually engage with religious history) and interested general readers.
This book is a scholarly tour de force... for exploring social and legal relationships in imperial Russia, and for glimpsing the devotional lives of its Orthodox inhabitants.
This book represents a significant advance in our understanding of confession in the Russian Empire. It has no equivalent in either English or Russian and it opens up to the English-speaking world the hidden world of Russian confession, showing its peculiarities and its convergence with Western traditions.
The technical language and specialized concepts of reli- gious sources, including images as well as texts, mined not only as institutional history but also understood theologically and as they impacted the everyday beliefs and experiences of ordinary people requires an expertise few historians have and that cannot be gained through formal training. This is, in short, a book only Kizenko could write and the field is lucky to have it. Every historian of Russia has something to learn from it and it should be required on every future orals list.
This book represents a significant advance in our understanding of confession in the Russian Empire. It has no equivalent in either English or Russian and it opens up to the English-speaking world the hidden world of Russian confession, showing its peculiarities and its convergence with Western traditions. One of the many strengths of Kizenko's work is exposition of the level of interaction between the Western Churches and the Russian Orthodox Church, mediated through Kyiv. Magisterial new book...based on an impressive array of archival sources belonging to both the Church and the State, supplemented by diaries, letters and memoirs.
Nadieszda Kizenko's Good for the Souls: A History of Confession in the Russian Empire is arguably the most important contribution to this historiographical development since its inception, a development which was partially initiated by Kizenko's groundbreaking study of Ioann of Kronstadt (2000) and which has been sustained and broadened by Kizenko in an array of probing articles and essays about liturgy, gender, and confession, the subject of her new book.
This book offers a thorough, engagingly written history of confession in the Russian Empire. Drawing on impressively wide-ranging research in central and provincial Russian archives and engaging the historiography of Christianity beyond the Russian Empire, Kizenko traces the evolution of confession through the collapse of the empire in 1917.
Good for the Souls represents a key intervention in our understanding of Orthodoxy in the Russian Empire and of the sacrament of forgiveness in the Orthodox Church. Based on Kizenko's detailed consideration of confession over three centuries, it will undoubtedly become the standard work on this question.
Nadieszda Kizenko's masterful history of confession in Russia offers a pathway toward understanding the cultural ramifications of confession for that seventeenth-century divide and for the modern Russian Empire that followed. It is a must-read for students of cultural and religious studies, of early modern Europe, and of Russian history.
This reviewer cannot recommend Kizenko's book enough: it is simply a must for all academics (even, or perhaps especially, for those who do not usually engage with religious history) and interested general readers.
This book is a scholarly tour de force... for exploring social and legal relationships in imperial Russia, and for glimpsing the devotional lives of its Orthodox inhabitants.
This book represents a significant advance in our understanding of confession in the Russian Empire. It has no equivalent in either English or Russian and it opens up to the English-speaking world the hidden world of Russian confession, showing its peculiarities and its convergence with Western traditions.
The technical language and specialized concepts of reli- gious sources, including images as well as texts, mined not only as institutional history but also understood theologically and as they impacted the everyday beliefs and experiences of ordinary people requires an expertise few historians have and that cannot be gained through formal training. This is, in short, a book only Kizenko could write and the field is lucky to have it. Every historian of Russia has something to learn from it and it should be required on every future orals list.
Notă biografică
Nadieszda Kizenko is Professor of History and Director of Religious Studies at the University at Albany. She is the author of the prize-winning book A Prodigal Saint: Father John of Kronstadt and the Russian People, numerous articles on Orthodox Christianity including The Feminization of Patriarchy? Women in Contemporary Russian Orthodoxy (winner of Best Article, Association for the Study of Eastern Christianity), and several translations.