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The Demise of the First Secularization: The Church of Gogol and the Church of Belinsky

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The article presents Gogol as marking the end of a century-long phase of secularism in Russian culture, from Peter the Great to Pushkin, and as the first writer to represent the cultural phenomenon of the ‘New Middle Ages’ and renewed religious zeal, first described by Berdyaev; further, it highlights some commonalities between Gogol and Belinsky and takes Belinsky as a leading instance of ‘religious atheism’. The article goes on to consider Russian culture’s need for neutral ‘middle ground’ between its multiple and extreme polarities and, in this context, highlights Sergej Averintsev’s plea for an orientation towards Aristotelianism.

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Correspondence to Mikhail Epstein.

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These are the opening two sections of a longer paper delivered at a conference on ‘Russian Culture at the Crossroads. Art and Society’ at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas,’ 24–25 November 1997. The title of the full paper is: ‘Russian Culture at the Crossroads: Secularization, Demonism and the Transition from a Binary to a Ternary Model.’

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Epstein, M. The Demise of the First Secularization: The Church of Gogol and the Church of Belinsky. Stud East Eur Thought 58, 95–105 (2006). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11212-005-4621-y

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11212-005-4621-y

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