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Book
L’hérétique au village : Les minorités religieuses dans l’Europe médiévale et moderne

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Abstract

Hérésies et dissidences religieuses se sont propagées jusque dans les villages les plus reculés de l’Europe médiévale et moderne, et s’y sont même parfois implantées durablement. Cet aspect de la vie rurale a pourtant longtemps été négligé par les historiens parce que les villes semblaient concernées en priorité, mais surtout parce qu’il demeure inhabituel de considérer la société villageoise sous l’angle de la diversité, de l’hétérogénéité, du conflit ou de la coexistence malaisée. À rebours des idées reçues, ce livre propose donc de redécouvrir les réseaux et les clivages qui favorisèrent dans les campagnes la diffusion et le maintien de groupes dissidents parfois majoritaires : cathares et vaudois, lollards et protestants, anabaptistes ou même morisques… Au cœur des villages, le développement et la survie des minorités confessionnelles ont dépendu des équilibres démographiques, des réseaux économiques et sociaux, des structures politiques tout autant que des représentations de soi et de l’autre. Et dans ce contexte de profonde interconnaissance, l’engagement religieux a pris assurément un relief particulier.


Book
Leo Tolstoy in Conversation with Four Peasant Sectarian Writers : The Complete Correspondence
Authors: --- --- ---
ISBN: 0776627813 0776627805 9780776627816 9780776627823 0776627821 9780776627809 Year: 2019 Publisher: Baltimore, Maryland : Baltimore, Md. : Project Muse, Project MUSE,

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Abstract

The theme of the peasantry is central throughout most of Tolstoy's long career. His obsession with this class is seen not just as a matter of social or humanitarian concern, but as a response to the questions of "how to live a good life" and "what is the meaning of life that an inevitable death will not destroy?" These questions plagued him his entire life. The letters he exchanged with the four major peasant sectarian writers (Bondarev, Zheltov, Verigin, and Novikov) reveal that Tolstoy was matched as a profound thinker by his correspondents, as they converse on religious-moral questions, the meaning of life and how one should strive to find it, and on a wide array of burning social and personal problems. Reading through the analysis and the extensively annotated letters as a unified whole, elucidates the progressive development of the ideas they shared (and where these diverged) and which guided Tolstoy's and his correspondents' lives. Juxtaposing Tolstoy's letters with those of his four sectarian correspondents makes them even more significant as it shows them in their original context -- a dialogue, or conversation. Also, with the aim to present the conversation in an even broader context, Andrew Donskov briefly discusses Tolstoy's relationship with peasants in general as well as with each of the four individual writers in particular. In addition, he provides a background sketch of two major religious groups, namely the Doukhobors and the Molokans, both of which still claim sizeable populations of followers in North America today.

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