The Occult in Russian and Soviet Culture

Front Cover
Bernice Glatzer Rosenthal
Cornell University Press, 1997 - History - 468 pages

A pioneering, richly interdisciplinary volume, this is the first work in any language on a subject that has long attracted interest in the West and is now of consuming interest in Russia itself. The cultural ferment unleashed by the collapse of the Soviet Union reawakened interest in the study of Russian religion and spirituality. This book provides a comprehensive account of the influence of occult beliefs and doctrines on intellectual and cultural life in twentieth-century Russia.

Bernice Glatzer Rosenthal's introduction delineates the characteristics of occult cosmology which distinguish it from mysticism and theology, and situates Russian occultism in historical and pan-European contexts. Contributors explore the varieties of occult thinking characteristic of prerevolutionary Russia, including Kabbala, theosophy, anthroposophy, and the fascination with Satanism. Other contributors document occultism in the cultural life of the early Soviet period, examine the surprising traces of the occult in the culture of the high Stalin era, and describe the occult revival in contemporary Russia. The volume includes bibliographical essays on Russian occult materials available outside Russia.

Contributors: Mikhail Agursky, Hebrew University; Valentina Brougher, Georgetown University; Maria Carlson, University of Kansas; Robert Davis, New York Public Library; Mikhail Epstein, Emory University; Kristi Groberg, North Dakota State University; Irina Gutkin, UCLA; Michael Hagemeister, Ruhr University, Bochum; Linda Ivanits, Pennsylvania State University; Edward Kasinec, New York Public Library; Judith Deutsch Kornblatt, University of Wisconsin; Hakan Lövgren, Independent Scholar; Bernice Glatzer Rosenthal, Fordham University; William F. Ryan, Warburg Institute, London; Holly Denio Stephens, University of Kansas; Anthony Vanchu, University of Texas, Austin; Renata Von Maydell, Munich University; George Young, Independent Scholar

From inside the book

Contents

Old Russian Sources
35
Two Three Instances of the Peasant Occult in Russian
59
THREE Russian Religious Thought and the Jewish Kabbala
75
PART TWO VARIETIES OF EARLY TWENTIETHCENTURY
97
Spiritualism Theosophy
135
SIX Anthroposophy in Russia Renata von Maydell
153
SEVEN Fedorovs Transformations of the Occult
171
EIGHT Russian Cosmism in the 1920s and Today
185
TWELVE Sergei Eisensteins Gnostic Circle
273
THIRTEEN The Occult in the Prose of Vsevolod Ivanov
299
FOURTEEN Daniil Andreev and the Mysticism of Femininity
325
SIXTEEN Political Implications of the Early
379
Source Materials
419
Literature on Russian Occult Journals
443
About the Contributors
451
Copyright

PART FOUR TRANSFORMATIONS OF THE OCCULT IN STALINS
223

Common terms and phrases

About the author (1997)

Bernice Glatzer Rosenthal is Professor of History at Fordham University. She has edited or co-authored four books, most recently Nietzsche and Soviet Culture: Ally and Adversary.

Bibliographic information