Bulletin of the Russian Christian movement - a religious, philosophical and literary magazine of Russian emigration. Published in Paris since 1925 . Until number 111 (1974) was published under the title "Bulletin of the Russian student Christian movement"
| Bulletin of the Russian Christian movement | |
|---|---|
| Abbreviation ( ISO 4 ) | Bulletin of RHD, VRHD |
| Specialization | religious philosophical, literary |
| Periodicity | 2 times per year |
| Tongue | Russian |
| Chief Editor | Tatyana Viktorova |
| A country | |
| Publisher | Editeurs réunis |
| Established | 1925 |
| Volume | 350-400 p. |
| ISSN print version | 0767-7294 |
In 1925, the leadership of the Russian student Christian movement entrusted its Paris secretary, Nikolai Zernov, with the publication of a newsletter aimed at rallying young emigrant students scattered throughout Europe . The first issue of the magazine was released in December 1925 with a circulation of 300 copies. Zernov published the magazine with Ivan Lagovsky, and after Zernov moved to England in 1930/31, Georgy Fedotov began to help Lagovsky in this. Since 1932, the magazine managed to be released only at large intervals. In 1935, the magazine closed due to some weakening of the RSHD in France , and again began to be published in the Baltic States in 1937 . In 1937–39, the publication of the All-Russian Artists' Union was undertaken by Professor Vasily Zenkovsky (5–6 times a year, volume - 50–60 pages). Then the publication of the magazine was interrupted by World War II.
The magazine was revived in Munich in 1949 by A. Kiselev , a student and friend of the long-time publisher I. Lagovsky. In 1950, the editorial staff returned to Paris, where the secretary of the RSHD I. Morozov assumed the responsibility of publishing the magazine. In addition to the editorial board, located in Paris and New York , he was assisted in this by Nikita Struve , who has been the executive editor since 1970 . Since 1955, the magazine was published approximately 4 times a year; since the beginning of the 70s. it has become much larger in volume.
At first, the magazine was largely devoted to organizational issues of the Russian student Christian movement, as well as issues of church and religion. At the post-war stage of its existence, the All-Russian Union of Artists is increasingly manifesting itself as a significant religious journal, which regularly also deals with cultural, literary and social issues. The section on religious issues also publishes texts from past centuries; in addition, the works of Nikolai Berdyaev , Sergiy Bulgakov , Semyon Frank , Vladimir Ilyin , Nikolai Lossky , Lev Shestov and other significant religious philosophers are printed. The magazine regularly posted on its pages articles on church life and anti-religious politics in the USSR , partly self- published texts, since 1974 this was also indicated in the journal’s output (Paris-New York-Moscow).
Since 1992 (No. 164), the magazine has been printed in Moscow from the Paris original layout , and since 2000 it has been published 2 times a year together with the Russian Way publishing house.
Editors : I. A. Lagovsky and N. M. Zernov (Paris, 1925-29), G. P. Fedotov and I. A. Lagovsky (1930–31), I. A. Lagovsky (1932–1933), V. V. Zenkovsky (1937-1938), L.N. Liperovsky (1939), A.N. Kiselev, then G.M. Benigsen (Munich, 1949), I.V. Morozov (Paris, 1949-1950), I.V. Morozov and N.A. Struve (1952-69), N.A. Struve until May 2016. Since 2016 (No. 206) - Tatyana Viktorova [1] .
Sources
- Cossack V. Lexicon of Russian literature of the XX century = Lexikon der russischen Literatur ab 1917 / [trans. with him.]. - M .: RIC "Culture", 1996. - XVIII, 491, [1] p. - 5,000 copies. - ISBN 5-8334-0019-8 .
Links
Notes
- ↑ Tatyana Viktorova | Bulletin of the Russian Christian movement (Rus.) (Neopr.) ? . vestnikrhd.wordpress.com. Date of treatment February 10, 2017.