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- Russian_soul abstract "The term Russian soul (Russian: Русская душа; also great Russian soul, mystifying Russian soul) has been used in literature to describe Russian spirituality. The writings of many Russian writers such as Nikolai Gogol, Leo Tolstoy and Fyodor Dostoyevsky offer descriptions of the Russian soul. The Russian word \"душа\" (dushá), is most closely translated into the word soul. The Russian soul can be described as a cultural tendency of Russians to describe life and events from a religious and philosophically symbolic perspective. This word's widespread use and the flexibility of its use in everyday speaking is one way in which the Russian soul manifests itself in Russian culture. In Russia a person's soul or dusha is the key to a person's identity and behavior and this cultural understanding that equates the person with his soul is what is described as the Russian soul. Depth, strength, and compassion are general characteristics of the Russian soul. According to Dostoevsky, \"the most basic, most rudimentary spiritual need of the Russian people is the need for suffering, ever-present and unquenchable, everywhere and in everything\". Dostoevsky's ideas about Russian soul are closely connected with Eastern Orthodox Christianity, its ideal of Christ, his suffering for others, his will to die for others and his quiet humility about it.In the second edition of the story Taras Bulba, Gogol provides one of the early characterizations of what came to be known as the Russian soul when Taras exhorted his fellow Cossacks, saying: \"There have been brotherhoods in other lands, but never any such brotherhoods as on our Russian soil. It has happened to many of you to be in foreign lands. You look: there are people there also, God's creatures, too; and you talk with them as with the men of your own country. But when it comes to saying a hearty word--you will see. No! They are sensible people, but not the same; the same kind of people, and yet not the same! No, brothers, to love as the Russian soul loves, is to love not with the mind or anything else, but with all that God has given, all that is within you.\"".
- Russian_soul wikiPageID "10469460".
- Russian_soul wikiPageLength "12037".
- Russian_soul wikiPageOutDegree "39".
- Russian_soul wikiPageRevisionID "680634198".
- Russian_soul wikiPageWikiLink Alexander_I_of_Russia.
- Russian_soul wikiPageWikiLink Buddhism.
- Russian_soul wikiPageWikiLink Category:Russian_culture.
- Russian_soul wikiPageWikiLink Catherine_the_Great.
- Russian_soul wikiPageWikiLink Cossacks.
- Russian_soul wikiPageWikiLink Dead_Souls.
- Russian_soul wikiPageWikiLink Eastern_Orthodox_Church.
- Russian_soul wikiPageWikiLink Friedrich_Wilhelm_Joseph_Schelling.
- Russian_soul wikiPageWikiLink Fyodor_Dostoyevsky.
- Russian_soul wikiPageWikiLink Georg_Wilhelm_Friedrich_Hegel.
- Russian_soul wikiPageWikiLink German_Romanticism.
- Russian_soul wikiPageWikiLink Hindu.
- Russian_soul wikiPageWikiLink Ivan_Turgenev.
- Russian_soul wikiPageWikiLink Leo_Tolstoy.
- Russian_soul wikiPageWikiLink Literature.
- Russian_soul wikiPageWikiLink Martin_Malia.
- Russian_soul wikiPageWikiLink Melchior_de_Vogüé.
- Russian_soul wikiPageWikiLink Napoleon.
- Russian_soul wikiPageWikiLink Nicholas_I_of_Russia.
- Russian_soul wikiPageWikiLink Nikolai_Gogol.
- Russian_soul wikiPageWikiLink Orthodoxy,_Autocracy,_and_Nationality.
- Russian_soul wikiPageWikiLink Peter_the_Great.
- Russian_soul wikiPageWikiLink Serfdom.
- Russian_soul wikiPageWikiLink Sergey_Uvarov.
- Russian_soul wikiPageWikiLink Slavophilia.
- Russian_soul wikiPageWikiLink Soul.
- Russian_soul wikiPageWikiLink Soviet_Union.
- Russian_soul wikiPageWikiLink Taras_Bulba.
- Russian_soul wikiPageWikiLink The_Phenomenology_of_Spirit.
- Russian_soul wikiPageWikiLink Vissarion_Belinsky.
- Russian_soul wikiPageWikiLink Westernization.
- Russian_soul wikiPageWikiLinkText "Russian soul".
- Russian_soul wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Lang-ru.
- Russian_soul subject Category:Russian_culture.
- Russian_soul comment "The term Russian soul (Russian: Русская душа; also great Russian soul, mystifying Russian soul) has been used in literature to describe Russian spirituality. The writings of many Russian writers such as Nikolai Gogol, Leo Tolstoy and Fyodor Dostoyevsky offer descriptions of the Russian soul. The Russian word \"душа\" (dushá), is most closely translated into the word soul.".
- Russian_soul label "Russian soul".
- Russian_soul sameAs Q5398034.
- Russian_soul sameAs Alma_rusa.
- Russian_soul sameAs Âme_russe.
- Russian_soul sameAs Alma_russa.
- Russian_soul sameAs m.02qf15k.
- Russian_soul sameAs Q5398034.
- Russian_soul sameAs 俄罗斯灵魂.
- Russian_soul wasDerivedFrom Russian_soul?oldid=680634198.
- Russian_soul isPrimaryTopicOf Russian_soul.