Description |
1 online resource (391 pages) |
Series |
Brill's Series in Church History |
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Brill's series in church history
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Contents |
List of Illustrations; List of Abbreviations; Preface; Part I Method; Chapter One The Polyphonic Novel; 1.1 Introduction. 'The Man in Man' and the Heart; 1.2 Polyphony as Genre of Dostoevsky's Novels (Bakhtin); 1.3 The Place of the Idea in the Polyphonic Novel; 1.4 Dialogue within the Polyphonic Novel as a Condition for Exposing the Truth; 1.5 The Four Entities: Living Person, Author, Narrator, Hero; 1.6 The Relation between Author, Narrator, and Characters in the Polyphonic Novel; Chapter Two Kaleidoscope; 2.1 The Two Types of Reader of the Polyphonic Novel |
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The Life of the Text in 'Great Time'2.2 The Relation between Dostoevsky's Ego Documents and the Polyphonic Novels; Part II The Roots of Polyphony, or: 'How do you Believe?' Dostoevsky's Religious Conceptions in the Ego Documents; Chapter Three Introduction; Chapter Four The Rebirth of Religious Convictions; 4.1 Dostoevsky's Youth; 4.2 The Periodisation of Dostoevsky's Faith; 4.3 The Meaning of Siberia for the Periodisation of Dostoevsky's Faith; 4.4 Doubt and Constants of Faith. Christ as the Truth; Chapter Five 'Masha is Lying on the Table'; 5.1 Introduction. The Text |
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5.2 The Scientific-Ethical Problem of the Ego DocumentsThe Lacunae; 5.3 Discussion of the Text; 5.4 The Form of "the 1864 Entry" in Relation to Other Genres; Chapter Six 'How Do You Believe?' Philosophically; 6.1 Introduction. 'A Philosophical Deist'; 6.2 Dostoevsky and Kant; Chapter Seven 'How Do You Believe?' Theologically; 7.1 Introduction; 7.2 The Conception of God in Connection with Christology and Ethics; 7.3 Christ as God and Man in Dostoevsky's Conception; 7.4 The Body of Christ in the Grave, Resurrection, and Salvation |
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7.5 Transfiguration into the 'I of Christ' in Relation to the Thought of A.S. Khomyakov7.6 Transfiguration into the 'I of Christ' in Relation to the Doctrine of Theosis and the Doctrine of the Pervasion of Creation by Divine Energies; 7.7 Dostoevsky's Ego Documents in the Light of Theosis and the Unity of Creation; 7.8 The Ethics of Neighbourly Love and the Immortality of the Soul; 7.9 Neighbourly Love and the Coincidence of God and Immortality in "Unfounded Assertions", the Correspondence with A. Kovner and N. Ozmidov. The Hidden Personal Message; 7.10 Realism and the Hidden Message |
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7.11 Dostoevsky's Ideology7.12 General and Contemporary History in an Eschatological Perspective in "Socialism and Christianity"; 7.13 Dostoevsky's Chiliasm; 7.14 The 'Apocalyptic' and the 'Rose-Coloured' Christianity of Dostoevsky; 7.15 Belief in Literal Resurrection from the Dead. Dostoevsky and N.F. Fedorov; 7.16 Freedom in the Light of Sin; Chapter Eight Conclusion; Part III Dostoevsky and Early Dialectical Theology; Chapter Nine Introduction to the Theme "Dostoevsky and Early Dialectical Theology"; 9.1 Introduction; 9.2 State of Research |
Summary |
Theological hermeneutics receives a new impulse in this book through critical investigation of F.M. Dostoevsky's personal faith in its correlation both to his literary oeuvre and to its reception by the two main representatives of dialectical theology, K. Barth and E. Thurneysen |
Notes |
9.3 Dostoevsky Reception and Translations in the German-Speaking World |
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references and index |
Notes |
Print version record |
Subject |
Dostoyevsky, Fyodor, 1821-1881 -- Religion
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Dostoyevsky, Fyodor, 1821-1881 -- Philosophy
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Dostoyevsky, Fyodor, 1821-1881 |
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Religion and literature -- Russia
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Life in literature.
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LITERARY CRITICISM / Russian & Former Soviet Union.
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Life in literature
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Philosophy
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Religion
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Religion and literature
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Russia
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Form |
Electronic book
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ISBN |
9789004244597 |
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900424459X |
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