Published online by Cambridge University Press: 27 January 2017
1. See Malia, Martin, “The End of the Noble Dream: How ‘Western Marxism’ Misread the Real Marx,” Times Literary Supplement, 7 November 1997, 20–22.Google Scholar
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6. Ibid., 148.
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10. Ibid., 140, 157. Etkind also associates the Skoptsy with Max Weber's Puritan ethic, crediting them with helping to build Russian capitalism (157). Since capitalism lost out to communism in the twentieth century, one might be forgiven for concluding from Etkind's work that repressed homosexuality was at the root of the Soviet system.
11. For a sensible discussion of cultural influence, see Ronald Vroon, “The Old Belief and Sectarianism as Cultural Models in the Silver Age,” Christianity and the Eastern Slavs, vol. 2, Russian Culture in Modern Times, ed. Robert P. Hughes and Irina Paperno (Berkeley, 1994), 172–90.
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17. Ibid., 71.
18. Bulgakov, Sergei, “Heroism and Asceticism: Reflections on the Religious Nature of the Russian Intelligentsia,” in Shatz, Marshall S. and Zimmerman, Judith E., trans, and eds., Vekhi: Landmarks (Armonk, N.Y., 1994), 17–49.Google Scholar
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22. Rancour-Laferriere, Slave Soul of Russia, 7, 35.
23. Ibid., 5, 19, 2.
24. Naiman, Sex in Public, 23, 17, 4. See Etkind's positive review: Aleksandr Etkind, “Plot’ ideologii,” Novoe literaturnoe obozrenie, 1997, no. 28: 390–94.
25. Naiman, Sex in Public, 19, 18, 19, 5, 16.
26. Ibid., 25, 24.
27. Ibid., 26.
28. Ibid., 299.
29. Ibid., 12.
30. Klibanov, A. I., Narodnaia sotsial'naia utopiia v Rossii: Period feodalizma (Moscow, 1977).Google Scholar
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32. Groys, Total Art, 36.
33. Ibid., 64.
34. Ibid., 70.
35. Ibid., 65.
36. Rosenthal, ed., Occult in Russian and Soviet Culture, 6, 12, 30, 394.
37. Ibid., 380.
38. Ibid., 18, 388, 390.
39. Ibid., 402, 404.
40. Ibid., 398–99.
41. Ibid., 411, 407.
42. Ibid., 418, 30.
43. Kaariainen, Kimmo and Furman, D. E., “Veruiushchie, ateisty i prochie (Evoliutsiia rossiiskoi religioznosti),” Voprosy filosofii, 1997, no. 6: 35–52.Google Scholar
44. Ibid., 44.
45. Ibid., 51.