No. 1-2 (37) 2019
Table of Contents
Main Theme
Crisis and Transformations in Russian Orthodoxy
- The Russian Orthodox Church and the October Revolution
- “Churching” 1917: The Church Crisis and the Parish Revolution
- The Crisis of the “State Church” in the Focus of the Parish Question. 1860s–1917
- The Most Holy Governing Synod on the Eve and During the Revolution. An Historical and Sociological Essay
- Moscow’s Diocesan Revolution
- The “Spiritual Proletariat” and the Popular Legitimacy of the All-Russian Church Council of 1917–1918
- Canon Law in a Bolshevik Courtroom: The Russian Revolution as an Orthodox Legal Revolution
- The Issue of Autocephaly of the Georgian Church in 1917 in the Archive of V.N. Beneshevich
- From Church Revolution to Social Revolution: The Zealots of Church Renewal in 1917
- Soviet Renovationism: A Church Phenomenon or an Instrument of Secret Services?
- The Cosmopolitics of Charismatic Orthodoxy: Stefan (Vasilii Karpovich Podgornyi) and His Followers
Changing Forms and Images of Religiosity
- Popular Religiosity and Images of Priesthood during the First World War and Revolution
- Russian Orthodox Women in Unorthodox Times: Patterns of Female Agency and Authority in the Revolutionary Era, 1917–1927
- Images of the Country, Church, the People and the Human Person in Prayers for Russia of the Revolutionary Era
Religious Minorities of the Empire
- The Sangha in the Age of Degradation. Responses of the Russian Buddhists to the Russian Revolution and Civil War
- New Israel and Red October: A Movement of Russian Religious Dissent at the Turn of Epochs
- Evangelical Christians and Baptists of Russia in the Revolutionary Process of 1917–1922: Transformation of Identity (Based on Materials of the Confessional Press)
- The Concept of “New Muslim” between the Two Revolutions on the Pages of “Shura” Journal (1908–1917)
- Transformation of Islamic Institutions in Revolutionary Russia: The Orenburg Muslim Spiritual Assembly and the Muslim Clergy of the Volga-Ural Region in 1917 — early 1918
- Revolution and Civil War through the Perceptions and Actions of Muslim Clergy in Dagestan, 1917–1921
Revolution and the New Sacral Meanings
- Antichrist, Katechon and the Russian Revolution
- «Can a Christian Be a Socialist?» The (Ir)reconcilability of Christianity and Socialism in Revolutionary Russia
- Godbuilding and Authoritarianism: A Discussion of Bolshevism and Religion
- Wings of Revolution
- Struggling for Equal Burial: Funeral Administration in Early Soviet Union
- Cultural Hegemony, Religion and the 1917 Russian Revolution
- A Hundred Years that Troubled the Soul... The October Revolution as a Sacred Object
- The Benefits of the “Cultural Turn” in Slavic Studies for the Studies of the Russian Revolution