Print version: Landmarks revisited : the Vekhi symposium 100 years on. Brighton, Massachusetts : Academic Studies Press, c2013 321 pages Cultural Revolutions: Russia in the 20th Century ISBN 9781618112866
reface 8 // Introduction 10 // by Robin Aizlewood, Ruth Coates, and Evert van der Zweerde // Part I: Vekhi and the Russian Intelligentsia // 1. Word Games? The Russian “Intelligentsia” 49 // as a Question of Semantics by Frances Nethercott // 2. Perversions and Transformations: 69 // A. S. Izgoevand the Intelligentsia Debates, 1904-22 by Stuart Finkel // 3. The Intelligentsia Fights Back: 86 // The Left-wing Response to Vekhi and its Significance by Christopher Read // Part II: Vekhi and Political Philosophy // 4. The Rise of the People and the Political Philosophy 104 // of the Vekhi Authors by Evert van der Zweerde // 5. Individual Freedom and Social Justice: 128 // Bogdan Kistiakovskii s Defense of the Law by Vanessa Rampton // 6. Russian Political Theology in an Age of Revolution 146 // by Randall A. Poole // Part III: Vekhi and the Russian Intellectual Tradition // 7. Chaadaev and Vekhi // by Robin Aizlewood // 8. Lev Tolstoi, Petr Struve and the “Afterlife” of Vekhi // by G. M. Hamburg // 9. Aleksei Losev and Vekhi: // Strategic Traditions in Social Philosophy by Elena Takho-Godi // Part IV: Vekhi and the Russian Religious Renaissance // 10. Inside Out: // Good, Evil, and the Question of Inspiration by Oliver Smith // 11. D. S. Merezhkovskii Versus the Vekhi Authors // by Bernice Glatzer Rosenthal // 12. Feuerbach, Kant, Dostoevskii: // The Evolution of “Heroism” and “Asceticism” in Bulgakov’s Work to 1909 by Ruth Coates List of Contributors // Index