Skip to the main content

Original scientific paper

https://doi.org/10.17234/SEC.31.4

Artist as Yurodivy: Holy Man or Madman? (Summary)

Dina Pokrajac


Full text: croatian pdf 238 Kb

page 135-156

downloads: 909

cite


Abstract

This essay deals with the holly fool (yurodivy) phenomenon in the cultural history of Russia providing interpretations of various texts – religious, medical, but primarily artistic ones (literature and film). Russian artists and intellectuals often practise mysticism and for them the sacred is a transcendental ontological reality to be experimented with. The author examines the way in which the yurodivy, an idiosyncrasy of Russian folk culture, at a certain historical moment became entwined with the thought of Russian authors such as Dostoevsky, Berdjajev and Tarkovsky, providing them with a form for a religious conception of art and a specific vision of the artist as a yurodivi “who mocks the world by day, only to mourn it by night” and artistic works as “pathways towards the other world”.

Keywords

Andrei Tarkovsky; Fyodor M. Dostoevsky; Alexander Sokurov; Nicolai Berdyaev; holly fool; the Russian idea; heterodoxy; film and literary anthropology; yurodivy

Hrčak ID:

231038

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/231038

Publication date:

23.12.2019.

Article data in other languages: croatian

Visits: 2.045 *