Společný domov. Helene Iswolsky, ruská emigrace a postrevoluční hnutí

Title in English The Common Home. Helene Iswolsky, Russian Emigration and Post-revolution Movement
Authors

FOLETTI Karolina

Year of publication 2020
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Arts

Citation
Description The life topic of Helene Iswolsky (1896–1975), Russian émigré, was her lost homeland, Russia. In her texts, she describes Russia as a profoundly spiritual nation, resisting the communist regime. Raised in a Protestant-Orthodox family, Iswolsky embraced the Catholic faith in 1921, and the Church became her second home. The personal experience of conversion profoundly affected her work: on the level of the interconfessional dialog, she strove for a better understanding between Orthodox and Catholics; on the politico-social level she stood for the creation a of a new system – anticapitalistic, anticommunist, built on the bases of the Christian ethics. The book L’Homme 1936 en Russie soviétique, in which Iswolsky reflects on the situation of the coeval Soviet Union, will be analyzed with regard to the political context of the 1930s. The crucial questions will concern the image of Russia the author presents, and the reception of this image by the French public.
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