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Dostoevsky Beyond Dostoevsky is a collection of essays with a broad
interdisciplinary focus. It includes contributions by leading
Dostoevsky scholars, social scientists, scholars of religion and
philosophy. The volume considers aesthetics, philosophy, theology,
and science of the 19th century Russia and the West that might have
informed Dostoevsky's thought and art. Issues such as evolutionary
theory and literature, science and society, scientific and
theological components of comparative intellectual history, and
aesthetic debates of the nineteenth century Russia form the core of
the intellectual framework of this book. Dostoevsky's oeuvre with
its wide-ranging interests and engagement with philosophical,
religious, political, economic, and scientific discourses of his
time emerges as a particularly important case for the study of
cross-fertilization among disciplines. The individual chapters
explore Dostoevsky's real or imaginative dialogues with aesthetic,
philosophic, and scientific thought of his predecessors,
contemporaries, and successors, revealing Dostoevsky's forward
looking thought, as it finds its echoes in modern literary theory,
philosophy, theology and science.
Dostoevsky Beyond Dostoevsky is a collection of essays with a broad
interdisciplinary focus. It includes contributions by leading
Dostoevsky scholars, social scientists, scholars of religion and
philosophy. The volume considers aesthetics, philosophy, theology,
and science of the 19th century Russia and the West that might have
informed Dostoevsky's thought and art. Issues such as evolutionary
theory and literature, science and society, scientific and
theological components of comparative intellectual history, and
aesthetic debates of the nineteenth century Russia form the core of
the intellectual framework of this book. Dostoevsky's oeuvre with
its wide-ranging interests and engagement with philosophical,
religious, political, economic, and scientific discourses of his
time emerges as a particularly important case for the study of
cross-fertilization among disciplines. The individual chapters
explore Dostoevsky's real or imaginative dialogues with aesthetic,
philosophic, and scientific thought of his predecessors,
contemporaries, and successors, revealing Dostoevsky's forward
looking thought, as it finds its echoes in modern literary theory,
philosophy, theology and science.
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