The founder of modern Russian philosophy, Vladimir Solovyov
(1853-1900) is widely considered its greatest practitioner.
Together with Dostoevsky and Tolstoy, he is one of the towering
intellectual figures in late-nineteenth-century Russia, and his
diverse writings influenced much of the non-Marxist tradition of
twentieth-century Russian thought. Philosopher, journalist, poet,
and playwright, Solovyov was also a mystic who claimed to have had
three visions of Divine Sophia.
This personification of wisdom with golden hair and a radiant
aura echoes both the eternal feminine and the world soul. Rooted in
Christian and Jewish mysticism, Eastern Orthodox iconography, Greek
philosophy, and European romanticism, the Sophiology that suffuses
Solovyov's philosophical and artistic works is both intellectually
sophisticated and profoundly inspiring. Judith Deutsch Kornblatt
brings together key texts from Solovyov's writings about Sophia:
poetry, fiction, drama, and philosophy, all extensively annotated
and some available in English for the first time (with assistance
from the translators Boris Jakim and Laury Magnus).
In the comprehensive introductory essay that encompasses the
book's first half, Kornblatt establishes the historical,
philosophical, religious, and literary context of Solovyov's
Sophiology, emphasizing its connection to contemporaneous religious
and philosophical thought as well as other social and cultural
trends in Europe and the United States for example, Solovyov's
reactions to his changing world ran parallel to and sometimes
intersected with those of Darwin, Nietzsche, and William James.
Sophiology is once again finding enthusiasts both in Russia and
among seekers around the world.
The definitive introduction to Solovyov's wisdom and its
profound impact on Russian thought and culture, Divine Sophia makes
Solovyov's mystical visions and literary "re-visions" of Sophia
accessible to scholars and lay readers alike. Solovyov's wisdom
writings captivated several generations of poets and philosophers
during the pre- and postrevolutionary periods in Russia and abroad.
In particular, his Sophiology had a profound influence on such
major figures of Russia's Silver Age as Alexander Blok, Andrei
Belyi, Pavel Florensky, and Sergei Bulgakov."
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