"An important work for all collections"--Choice
"Vera Shevzov's book on Orthodoxy in late imperial Russia is much
more than welcome: it is simply necessary....Shevzov peels away
layers of both Soviet and post-Soviet misperceptions of Orthodoxy,
drawing a clear line, for example, between superstition and
ritual--sometimes a problem for Orthodoxy
in present-day Russia. Along the way, we garner all sorts of
fascinating insights into religious practice and stories from the
lived experience of laypeople....Russian Orthodoxy on the Eve of
Revolution immediately takes its place as an essential contribution
to our understanding (or lack thereof)
of religious life in the nineteenth century Russian
empire."--Slavic Review
"The magisterial comprehensiveness of Russian Orthodoxy on the Eve
of Revolution, therefore, does not just fill a gap: it opens up a
whole new area of nineteenth century ecclesiastical
historiography."--Theology
"A fascinating study....Shevzov's book is not only of immense
interest as a historical study, but contirbutes to an understanding
of the Russian Orthodox Church today."--Times Literary
Supplement
,.".this poioneering volume represents a monumental contribution to
the growing literature on the much-neglected sphere of religion. It
provides richly detailed descriptions, crip and probing analyses,
and fresh new perspectives on Orthodoxy and the Orthodox on the eve
of revolutionary
cataclysm."--The Russian Review
,.".a welcome addition to a growing historical literature on
"lived" religious experience in the Russian Empire. Imaginative and
thoroughly researched, it should serve as a standard reference work
for scholars of Russia, Europe, andreligion more
generally.--American Historical Review
"Vera Shevzov sets before us the rich diversity, the spiritual
ferment, and the desire for change that found expression in the
voice of the people, even in their loyalty to Holy Tradition.
Anyone who wants to understand either Russian Pravoslavie or the
Marxism-Leninism that (temporarily!)
supplanted it must read her report from the front line."--Jaroslav
Pelikan, Sterling Professor Emeritus of History, Yale
University
"This is a remarkable book! With masterful attention to detail,
Shevzov presents a fascinating and challenging picture of the
Russian Orthodox Church on the eve of the revolutionary period,
from the corridors of power in St. Petersburg to the humblest
provincial village chapel. In the process she
offers a helpful corrective to much of modern scholarship, which
tends to contrast and even oppose 'popular religion' to 'official
religion.' She convincingly argues that 'lived religion' in
pre-revolutionary Russia was at once 'popular' and
'official.'"--John H. Erickson, Dean and Peter N.
Gramowich Professor of Church History, St. Vladimir's Orthodox
Theological Seminary
"Russian Orthodoxy on the Eve of the Revolution is a magisterial
study of religious identity and community in late Imperial Russia.
Vera Shevzov explores both the abstract conceptualizations of what
the Russian Orthodox church should be, and the many-faceted ways in
which the Christian community was
realized in daily life. With rich detail and sympathetic insight,
Shevzov presents the strivings of clergy and laity, elite and
modest peasants and townspeople, to identify an authentic
Christianity and live according to its precepts. Shedocuments
conflict and contention, as lay believers,
empowered by confidence in their own Orthodoxy, challenged state
and church leaders. At the same time, she reveals the shared values
and common concern across the social spectrum of believers to
maintain the centrality of religious faith and practice amidst the
challenges of modernity and
revolutionary upheaval."--Eve Levin, Department of History,
University of Kansas
"In Russian Orthodoxy on the Eve of Revolution Vera Shevzov takes
us on an exceptionally well-conceived tour of five "sacred centers"
of Russian Orthodoxy: churches, chapels, feasts, icons, and the
veneration of Mary. Thanks to the erudition, uncanny eye and
eloquence of our guide, we see the
Russian church tradition in all its color, emotion, energy,
inventiveness, activism-in a word, in all itslife."--Paul Valliere,
McGregor Professor in the Humanities, Butler University
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |