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Tag: Russian literature

Leo Tolstoy on Law, Morality, and Religion

Rembrandt: Moses Smashing the Tablets of the Law 1658

The following post by Evelyn Heath, an undergraduate student at Northwestern University, is another in the series of posts highlighting exemplary work by undergraduates with interests in Russian Philosophy, Literature, and Religious Thought. The NURPRT Forum welcomes any undergraduate student to submit academic writing related to these fields to be considered for publication. Introduction: Lev Nikolayevich Tolstoy’s

Russia in Search of Apocalypse: Eschatology and the Politics of the End-Time

"The Third Rome Ascends: Babel Rebuilt with Missiles and Martyrs (a Bruegelian Allegory ) From the shattered bones of sacred tradition rises a new cathedral—not to God, but to power. Cloaked in the vestments of Orthodoxy yet crowned with nuclear halos, this Tower of Babel fuses ecclesiastical ruin, imperial nostalgia, and apocalyptic ambition. Crowds march upward in obedient spirals as missile silos replace bell towers, and cranes lift dogma into orbit. Overhead, a mushroom cloud flattens heaven into doctrine. This is no temple of salvation—it is a sanctuary of annihilation, a shrine where the Antichrist wears a cross.

This article, written by  Mikhail Epstein, is appearing for the first time in English on the NURPLRT Forum. An expanded version of this article is published in Russian in the book: Mikhail Epstein. Pered kontsom istorii? Grani russkogo antimira (Before the End of History? Facets of the Russian Anti-World). New York: Freedom Letters, 2025. (Series

“We see the most powerful argument against Christianity in Dostoyevsky’s ‘The Brothers Karamazov’”. – Prof. Gary Saul Morson

Demir NW

This paper by Demir Aytaç was originally published in the journal Bütün Dünya, Başkent Üniversitesi Kültür Yayını (March 2025): p.121-127. It appears for the first time in English here on the Forum. It was while I was reading the classics of Russian literature in the historical buildings of Northwestern University—which was founded in the 1850’s—that

CFP: “Religion, Nationalism, and Dissidence”

Northwestern Studies in Russian Philosophy, Literature, and Religious Thought  Call for papers: “Religion, Nationalism, and Dissidence” Editors: Jimmy Sudário Cabral (Federal University of Juiz da Fora) and Susan McReynolds (Northwestern University) Northwestern Studies in Russian Philosophy, Literature, and Religious Thought invites article submissions on the topic “Religion, Nationalism, and Dissidence.”  Literature in Russia has always

In Search of Lost Dreams

Karl Briullov, Dream of a Young Woman Before Dawn, 1833

The following post by Austin Benedetto, an undergraduate student at Northwestern University, is another in the series of posts highlighting exemplary work by undergraduates with interests in Russian Philosophy, Literature, and Religious Thought. The NURPRT Forum welcomes any undergraduate student to submit academic writing related to these fields to be considered for publication. Follow your dreams. It