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Holy Fathers, Secular Sons - Clergy, Intelligentsia, and the Modern Self in Revolutionary Russia (Paperback)
Loot Price: R1,211
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Holy Fathers, Secular Sons - Clergy, Intelligentsia, and the Modern Self in Revolutionary Russia (Paperback)
Series: NIU Series in Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Holy Fathers, Secular Sons is the first study of the Orthodox
clergy's contribution to Russian society. Prior to the 1860s,
clergymen's sons were not allowed to leave the castelike clergy in
large numbers. When permission was granted, they responded by
entering free professions and political movements in droves.
Challenging the standard view of educated pre-revolutionary
Russians as largely westernized, secular, and patricidal, Laurie
Manchester demonstrates that the clergymen's sons did retain their
fathers' values. This was true even of the minority who became
atheists. Drawing on the clergy's commitment to moral activism,
anti-aristocratism, and nationalism, clergymen's sons believed they
could, and should, save Russia. The consequence was a cultural
revolution that helped pave the way for the 1917 revolutions. Using
a massive array of previously untapped archival and published
sources--including lively first-hand autobiographical writings of
over two hundred clergymen's sons--Manchester constructs a
composite biography of their childhoods, educations, and adult
lives. In a highly original approach, she explores how they
employed the image of the clerical family to structure their
political, professional, and personal lives. Manchester's work
provides a window into an extremely significant but little-known
world of Russian educated culture while contributing to histories
of lived religion, private life, and memory, as well as to debates
over secularization, modernity, and revolution. Holy Fathers,
Secular Sons powerfully challenges the assumptions that radical
change cannot be inspired by tradition and that the modern age is
inherently secular.
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