Search

Published After
Published Before

Search Results

  • Female archetypes of Bunin’s images
    Views:
    20

    The system of ideas, Sophiology and philosophy of love of Vladimir Solovyov had a significant influence on the religious philosophy and formation of aesthetic views of the Russian Silver Age. Although the Nobel Prize-winning Russian writer in exile, Ivan Bunin, consciously distanced himself from the ideological and poetic tendencies of Russian Symbolism, the philosophical roots of Bunin’s prose after 1910 can be traced in Russian religious philosophy and Eastern religious teachings (Buddhism and Taoism). Bunin’s philosophy of love is also imbued with the dualistic vision that is fundamental to his philosophy of being, and the dichotomy of ‘heavenly’ and ‘earthly’ love is reflected in the ‘angelic’ and ‘demonic’ opposites of his female figures. Yet the former is the embodiment of the unattainable ideal of the Eternal Feminine, the latter, the Femme Fatale, the bearer of the earthly promise of carnal pleasures, of sexuality. The author’s female heroines also include the avatar of the Wise Woman (the embodiment of some ancient, archaic wisdom) or the Emanation of Isis (as the embodiment of cosmic energy, standing above the earthly laws of life and death). And like the symbols of yin and yang in Chinese philosophy, in the depths of each of Bunin’s female figures lurks something of its opposite.

  • The Outlines of Meaning’s Analysis of Social Phenomena in the Concept of S. L. Frank
    14 p.
    Views:
    358

    The present paper deals with the problem of how cultural meanings are perceived in S. L.
    Frank’s social theory. His conception lies between two main paths of sociological thought:
    Durkheim’s cognition of social facts as objective phenomena on the one hand, and Weber’s
    cognition of subjective meanings of personal actions, on the other. In his theory Frank concentrates
    on the concept of objective forming idea-force, which resembles the concept of
    social fact in its quality of exerting pressure on individual consciousness and volition, but it
    should be brought into harmony with interpretive methodology. In Frank’s view social ideas
    are regarded as a force forming social relations and therefore lie in the foundation of social
    institutions. These are, for example, ideas of state, of family, of friendship and so on. Social
    ideas are connected with the consciousness of the individual by their moral force. That is
    why such ideas are accepted by the individual at the emotional level of his spiritual life,
    because they believe that these ideas are true and organize their meanings and activities according
    to them. Thus social meanings of moral good or evil in human relations and in the
    social structure arise. At the same time they signify the emergence of sacred phenomena in
    society. Human beings, according the Frank’s theory, have an internal need to be possessed
    by the sacred senses that give them the feeling of the participation in the implementation of
    the transcendent goals. Society is an objective living idea which provides sacred meanings
    for the individual. On the whole, a society’s life is formed by the historically specific complex
    of ideas that are freely accepted or rejected by individuals and determine their feelings and
    behavior. There is no contradiction between personal freedom, creativity and social structure
    in S. Frank’s theory. The author of the present paperfinds similarities between S.Frank’s ideas
    and the fundamentals of cultural sociology.