Olga Tabachnikova is a Lecturer in Russian Studies at the University of Central Lancashire and Visiting Research Fellow at the University of Bath, UK. She holds a PhD in Mathematics and a PhD in Russian Literature and Philosophy. Previously she worked as a Research Officer and a Lecturer in Russian Cultural Studies at the University of Bath, and held a Leverhulme Early Career Fellowship at the Russian Department of the University of Bristol, UK, as well as the Entente Cordiale Scholarship to the Sorbonne, France.
Russia, once compared to a giant sphinx, is often considered in the Anglophone world an alien culture, often threatening and always enigmatic. Although recognizably European, Russian culture also has mystical features, including the idiosyncratic phenomenon of Russian irrationalism. Historically, Russian irrationalism has been viewed with caution in the West, where it is often seen as antagonistic to, and subversive of, the rational foundations of Western speculative philosophy. Some of the remarkable achievements of the Russian irrationalist approach, however, especially in the artistic sphere, have been recognized and even admired, though not sufficiently investigated.
Bridging the gap between intellectual cultures, Olga Tabachnikova discusses such fundamental irrationalist themes as language and the linguistic underpinning of culture; the power of illusion in national consciousness; the changing relationship between love and morality; the cultural roots of humour, as well as the relevance of various individual writers and philosophers from Pushkin to Brodsky to the construction of Russian irrationalism.
A Word of Caution
Introduction
1. The Language of Irrationalism?
2. Russia and the West. The Power of Illusion
3. On Russian Dreamers
4. Russian Eros: Love in the Context of Moral Philosophy
5. Towards the Question of the 'Man of Nature' and 'Man of Culture' in Russian Literature
6. Cases of Subversion. Chekhov and Brodsky: Under the Veneer of Rationalism (or: On the Concepts of Hot and Cold Blood as Philosophical Categories)
7. Rebellious Tradition: Russian Literary Laughter, between Poetry and Pain
Bibliography
Index