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Tolstoy's Quest for God
 Tolstoy's Quest for God
 Daniel Rancour-Laferriere

List price: $34.95

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 ISBN: 978-0-7658-0376-4
 Pages: 206
 Publication Date: 2007
 Binding: Cloth




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The religious dimension of Tolstoy’s life is usually associated with his later years following his renunciation of art. In this volume, Daniel Rancour-Laferriere demonstrates instead that Tolstoy was preoccupied with a quest for God throughout all of his adult life. Although renowned as the author of War and Peace, Anna Karenina, The Death of Ivan Ilych, and other literary works, and for his activism on behalf of the poor and the downtrodden of Russia, Tolstoy himself was concerned primarily with achieving personal union with God.

Tolstoy suffered from periodic bouts of depression which brought his creative life to a standstill, and which intensified his need to find comfort in the embrace of a personal God. At times he was in such psychic pain he wanted to die. Yet Tolstoy felt that he deserved to suffer, and he learned to welcome suffering in masochistic fashion. Rancour-Laferriere locates the psychological underpinnings of Tolstoy’s suffering in a bipolar illness that led him actively to seek suffering and self-humiliation in the Russian tradition of “holy foolishness.” With voluntary suffering, and Jesus Christ as his model, Tolstoy advocated “nonresistance to evil,” and in his daily life he strove never to return evil actions or words with physical or verbal resistance. On the other hand, being bipolar, Tolstoy in some situations would drift in a manic direction, indulging in delusions of grandeur. Indeed, the aging Tolstoy occasionally went so far as to equate himself with God, as can be seen from his diaries and personal correspondence.

The pantheistic world view which Tolstoy achieved at the end of his life meant that God was within himself and within all people and all things in the entire universe. By this time Tolstoy was also utilizing images of a mother to represent his God. With this essentially maternal God so conveniently available, there was nowhere Tolstoy could be without Her. For, in the end, Tolstoy’s quest for God was a compensatory search for the mother who died when he was barely two years old. Tolstoy’s Quest for God is an original and penetrating contribution to the study of one of the world’s supreme writers.

Daniel Rancour-Laferriere is emeritus professor of Russian at the University of California, Davis. He is the author of Out from Under Gogol’s Overcoat: A Psychoanalytic Study, The Mind of Stalin: A Psychoanalytic Study, The Slave Soul of Russia: Moral Masochism and the Cult of Suffering, Tolstoy’s Pierre Bezukhov: A Psychoanalytic Study, Tolstoy on the Couch: Misogyny, Masochism, and the Absent Mother, and Russian Nationalism from an Interdisciplinary Perspective.

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