Divine Sophia: The Wisdom Writings of Vladimir Solovyov
297Divine Sophia: The Wisdom Writings of Vladimir Solovyov
297Paperback(Including Annotated Translations by Boris Jakim, Judith Kornblatt, and Laury Magnus)
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Overview
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.
Product Details
ISBN-13: | 9780801474798 |
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Publisher: | Cornell University Press |
Publication date: | 02/15/2009 |
Edition description: | Including Annotated Translations by Boris Jakim, Judith Kornblatt, and Laury Magnus |
Pages: | 297 |
Product dimensions: | 6.10(w) x 9.70(h) x 0.90(d) |
Age Range: | 18 Years |
About the Author
Table of Contents
Part I: Who Is Solovyov and What Is Sophia?Introduction: Visions and Re- Visions of SophiaThe "Life Drama" of SolovyovPositivism and Spiritualism / Feminism and PansophismWisdom's Bequest: Sophia through the AgesSolovyov as Self- Conscious HeirHow to Write a Vision?Conclusion: Sophia as Divinely Human MediatorPart II: The Wisdom Writings of Solovyov—Annotated Translations1. Early Sophianic PoemsReading GuideEarly Poems"My tsaritsa appeared to me""My empress has a lofty palace""Near, far off, not here, not there"
2. The Sophia: A "Mystical- Theosophical- Philosophical-Theurgical- Political" DialogueReading GuideThe Sophia"On Man's Metaphysical Need""Sophie. First Triad. First Principles""First Dialogue: The Absolute Principle as Unity (The Principle of Monism)""Second Dialogue: The Absolute Principle as Duality (The Principle of Dualism)"["Third Dialogue"]"Second Dialogue: The Cosmic and Historical Process""Third Chapter: Morality and Politics"
3. Sophia in Philosophical Prose Reading Guide"Fragments": An Overview"On the Three Worlds""On the Three Conditions (in General)"From "Theological Principles"From Lectures on Divine Humanity: An OverviewLecture SevenLecture EightLecture NineLecture TenLectures Eleven and TwelveFrom Russia and the Universal Church (Book Three): An Overview"III. The Divine Essence and Its Threefold Manifestation""IV. The World Soul as the Foundation of Creation, Space, Time, and Mechanical Causality""V. The Higher World. The Freedom of the Pure Spirits""VI. The Three Chief Stages of the Cosmogonic Process""VII. The Threefold Incarnation of Divine Wisdom""The Idea of Humanity in Auguste Comte": An Overview"The Idea of Humanity in Auguste Comte"
4. "At the Dawn of Misty Youth": A Semiautobiographical Short StoryReading Guide"At the Dawn of Misty Youth"
5. The White Lily: Or a Dream on the Eve of the Feast of the Protection of the Mother of God (A Mystery- Jest in Three Acts)Reading GuideThe White Lily6. Three Encounters: Final PoemaReading GuideThree Encounters
Source Notes to the TranslationsBibliographyIndex
What People are Saying About This
Divine Sophia is an appealingly readable and accessible summary of Vladimir Solovyov's life, a presentation of the social, intellectual, and historical context in which he lived and thought, and an examination of the various sources of his Sophiology. Judith Deutsch Kornblatt reveals Solovyov the eccentric, the man, and the philosopher. This comprehensive collection of Solovyov's sophiological writings, carefully translated (by Kornblatt, Boris Jakim, and Laury Magnus) and thoroughly annotated, offers something for both scholars and seekers. The intellectual impact of this volume is far greater than the sum of its individual parts.
Divine Sophia offers a thorough and nuanced analysis of Solovyov's writings on the subject and makes them available in a translation that reads well in English. I recommend this book to anyone interested in Russian thought and culture.
By gathering Solovyov's variegated writings on Divine Wisdom into one volume and outfitting them with extensive but never intrusive commentary, Judith Deutsch Kornblatt has provided a unique resource for the study of modern Russian thought. If few areas of Russian intellectual life escaped Solovyov's influence, even fewer areas of Solovyov's own creativity escaped the lure of Divine Sophia, his theo-philosophical Muse. In her exposition, Kornblatt shows a remarkable talent for bringing clarity to complicated material without oversimplifying it. Solovyov's religious and intellectual world emerges from her analysis as radiant as ever, except that we understand it better. Kornblatt also opens up dimensions of Solovyov's sensibility that have been sorely underestimated by previous scholars, especially Solovyov's love of laughter, pranks, travesty and self-parody. She shows that Solovyov's powerful sense of humor was not an incidental personality trait but stood at the heart of his moral and mystical universe. This wonderful insight sets the whole of Solovyov's work into a new register, challenging us to read and evaluate this Russian philosopher, poet and prophet in ways that measure up to his stunning originality.