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Framing Mary : the Mother of God in Modern, Revolutionary, and Post-Soviet Russian Culture / edited by Amy Singleton Adams and Vera Shevzov.

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublication details: Dekalb [Illinois] : NIU Press, (c)2018.; Baltimore, Maryland : Project Muse, (c)2018.Description: 1 online resource (1 PDF (xii, 344 pages)) : illustrationsContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9781609092351
  • 9781501757006
Subject(s): Genre/Form: LOC classification:
  • BT652 .F736 2018
Online resources: Available additional physical forms:
Contents:
Vera Shevzov and Amy Singleton Adams -- More numerous than the stars in heaven : an early eighteenth-century multimedia compendium of Mariology / Elena N. Boeck -- The Akhtyrka Icon of the Mother of God : a glimpse of eighteenth-century Orthodox piety on a southwestern Frontier / Christine D. Worobec -- Pushkin framing Mary : blasphemy, beauty, and national identity / Sarah Pratt -- The Mother of God and the lives of Orthodox female religious in late Imperial Russia / William G. Wagner -- The woman at the Window : Gorky's revolutionary Madonna / Amy Singleton Adams -- Marina Tsvetaeva's images of the Mother of God in the context of Russian cultural developments in the 1910s-1920s / Alexandra Smith -- Kuzma Petrov-Vodkin's 1918 in Petrograd (The Petrograd Madonna) and the meaning of Mary in 1920 / Wendy Salmond -- Our Mother of Paris : the "creative renewal" of orthodox Mariology in the Russian emigration, 1920s-1930s / Natalia Ermolaev -- The Madonna painter : Pimen Maksimovich Sofronov and Marian iconography (1898-1973) / Roy R. Robson -- The Marian ideal in the works of Tatiana Goricheva and the Mariia journals / Elizabeth Skomp -- following in Mary's footsteps : Marian apparitions and pilgrimage in contemporary Russia / Stella Rock -- on the field of battle : the Marian face of post-Soviet Russia / Vera Shevzov -- Afterword / Judith Deutsch Kornblatt.
Subject: Despite the continued fascination with the Virgin Mary in modern and contemporary times, very little of the resulting scholarship on this topic extends to Russia. Russia's Mary, however, who is virtually unknown in the West, has long played a formative role in Russian society and culture. Framing Mary introduces readers to the cultural life of Mary from the seventeenth century to the post-Soviet era. It examines a broad spectrum of engagements among a variety of people--pilgrims and poets, clergy and laity, politicians and political activists--and the woman they knew as the Bogoroditsa. In this collection of well-integrated and illuminating essays, leading scholars of imperial, Soviet, and post-Soviet Russia trace Mary's irrepressible pull and inexhaustible promise from multiple disciplinary perspectives. Focusing in particular on the ways in which both visual and narrative images of Mary frame perceptions of Russian and Soviet space and inform discourse about women and motherhood, these essays explore Mary's rich and complex role in Russia's religion, philosophy, history, politics, literature, and art. Framing Mary will appeal to Russian studies scholars, historians, and general readers interested in religion and Russian culture.
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Item type Current library Collection Call number URL Status Date due Barcode
Online Book (LOGIN USING YOUR MY CIU LOGIN AND PASSWORD) Online Book (LOGIN USING YOUR MY CIU LOGIN AND PASSWORD) G. Allen Fleece Library ONLINE Non-fiction BT652.9 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Link to resource Available on1035549821

Includes bibliographies and index.

At every time and in every place : the Mother of God in modern Russian culture / Vera Shevzov and Amy Singleton Adams -- More numerous than the stars in heaven : an early eighteenth-century multimedia compendium of Mariology / Elena N. Boeck -- The Akhtyrka Icon of the Mother of God : a glimpse of eighteenth-century Orthodox piety on a southwestern Frontier / Christine D. Worobec -- Pushkin framing Mary : blasphemy, beauty, and national identity / Sarah Pratt -- The Mother of God and the lives of Orthodox female religious in late Imperial Russia / William G. Wagner -- The woman at the Window : Gorky's revolutionary Madonna / Amy Singleton Adams -- Marina Tsvetaeva's images of the Mother of God in the context of Russian cultural developments in the 1910s-1920s / Alexandra Smith -- Kuzma Petrov-Vodkin's 1918 in Petrograd (The Petrograd Madonna) and the meaning of Mary in 1920 / Wendy Salmond -- Our Mother of Paris : the "creative renewal" of orthodox Mariology in the Russian emigration, 1920s-1930s / Natalia Ermolaev -- The Madonna painter : Pimen Maksimovich Sofronov and Marian iconography (1898-1973) / Roy R. Robson -- The Marian ideal in the works of Tatiana Goricheva and the Mariia journals / Elizabeth Skomp -- following in Mary's footsteps : Marian apparitions and pilgrimage in contemporary Russia / Stella Rock -- on the field of battle : the Marian face of post-Soviet Russia / Vera Shevzov -- Afterword / Judith Deutsch Kornblatt.

Despite the continued fascination with the Virgin Mary in modern and contemporary times, very little of the resulting scholarship on this topic extends to Russia. Russia's Mary, however, who is virtually unknown in the West, has long played a formative role in Russian society and culture. Framing Mary introduces readers to the cultural life of Mary from the seventeenth century to the post-Soviet era. It examines a broad spectrum of engagements among a variety of people--pilgrims and poets, clergy and laity, politicians and political activists--and the woman they knew as the Bogoroditsa. In this collection of well-integrated and illuminating essays, leading scholars of imperial, Soviet, and post-Soviet Russia trace Mary's irrepressible pull and inexhaustible promise from multiple disciplinary perspectives. Focusing in particular on the ways in which both visual and narrative images of Mary frame perceptions of Russian and Soviet space and inform discourse about women and motherhood, these essays explore Mary's rich and complex role in Russia's religion, philosophy, history, politics, literature, and art. Framing Mary will appeal to Russian studies scholars, historians, and general readers interested in religion and Russian culture.

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