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The European Bibliography of Slavic and East European Studies (EBSEES) collects books, journal articles, reviews and dissertations from Eastern Europe (former countries of Eastern Bloc) which were published in Belgium, Germany, Finland, France, Great Britain, the Netherlands, Austria and Switzerland from 1991 to 2007. The segment "Literature" and "Culture" of the European Bibliography of Slavic and East European Studies contains 18.000 bibliographic entries (from the total asset of 85.000). More information can be found here.
ID | 24962 |
Title | Religious policy in the Soviet Union |
Editor(s) | Ed. by Ramet, Sabrina Petra |
Year | 1992 |
Pages | xix+361 p |
Place | Cambridge |
Publsiher | University Press |
Language(s) | eng |
Annotation | Cf.: Part I. Introduction: Walters, Philip, "A survey of Soviet religious policy", p. 3-30; Ramet, Sabrina Petra, "Religious policy in the era of Gorbachev", p. 31-52. Part II. Policy apparatus: Luchterhandt, Otto, "The Council of Religious Affairs", p. 55-83; Ellis, Jane, "Some reflections about religious policy under Kharchev", p. 84-104; Hebly, J.A., "The state, the church, and the oikumene: the Russian Orthodox Church and the World Council of Churches, 1948-1985", p. 105-22. Part III. Education, socialisation, and values: Holmes, Larry E., "Fear no evil: schools and religion in Soviet Russia", p. 125-57; Dunstan, John, "Soviet schools, atheism and religion", p. 158-86; Kliger, Samuel A. and De Vries, Paul H., "The Ten Commandments as values in Soviet people's consciousness", p. 187-205; Anderson, John, "Out of the kitchen out of the temple: religion, atheism and women in the Soviet Union", p. 206-28. Part IV. Cults and sects: Balzer, Marjorie Mandelstam, "Dilemmas of the spirit: religion and atheism in the Yakut-Sakha Republic", p. 231-51; Antic, Oxana, "The spread of modern cults in the USSR", p. 252-70. Part V. The world of christianity: Levitin-Krasnov, Anatolij, "The Russian Orthodox renovationist movement and its Russian historiography during the Soviet period", p. 273-91; Tataryn, Myroslaw, "The re-emergence of the Ukrainian (Greek) Catholic Church in the USSR", p. 292-318; Sawatsky, Walter, "Protestantism in the USSR", p. 319-49; Ramet, Sabrina Petra, "Epilogue: religion after the collapse", p. 350-54. Appendix: "Religious groups numbering 2,000 or more, in the USSR |
Subjects | Russia, USSR, Russia (Federation) / Religion, Churches [Browse all] |
Review(s) | Review by McLellan, David, in Slavonic and East European Review, 71(3), 1993, p. 569-70; by Vodoff, Wladimir, in Revue de l'Histoire des Religions, 4, oct.-déc. 1993, p. 496-97; by McKean, Robert B., in History, 79, 1994, p. 543-44; by Sakwa, Richard, in Religion, State and Society, 22(1), 1994, p. 128-30; by Lossky, Véronique, in European History Quarrterly, 25, 1995, p. 147-53; by Michel, Patrick, in Archives de Sciences sociales des Religions, 41(96), oct.-déc. 1996, p. 167 |
Medium | book |
Holdings | Search WorldCat |
PURL | Citation link |
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