Walter Laqueur
"Mikhail Epstein is probably the most important figurein
Russian literary theory in the post-Bakhtin, post-Lotman
era."
Alexander Genis, author of Red Bread
"The best example of . . . theological fantasy that
strikes a precise equilibrium between search for God and
struggle against God."
Ilya Kabakov
"A completely new view of the spiritual life of Russian
society . . . brings to mind the multivoiced novels of
Dostoevsky."
Publishers' Weekly
". . . Epstein’s truly unusual reckoning with the
disintegration of communism--and ideology itself--is
well worth a look."
Such is the form of Mikhail Epstein’s Cries in the New
Wilderness, a work of extraordinary artistic and
philosophical imagination, begun in Moscow in the
mid-1980s and now available for the first time in
English translation in an expanded version. Drawing on
his own participation in Moscow’s intellectual
associations and in expeditions to study popular
religious beliefs in southern Russia and Ukraine,Epstein
recreates the spiritual experience of a whole Russian
generation. His is not a documentary book, however, but
a "comedy of ideas," in which he constructs from the
voices he hears in the culture around him the religious
and philosophical worldviews of his fictional sects:
Foodniks and Domesticans, Arkists and Bloodbrothers,
Atheans and Good-believers, Steppies and Pushkinians.
Cries in the New Wilderness is filled with the voices of
these sects, from the mystical Thingwrights and the
absurdist Folls to the messianic Khazarists and the
doomsday Steppies. As a counterpoint to this medley of
comic, grotesque, poetic, banal, poignant, and harrowing
voices is the voice of the commentator, Professor
Gibaydulina, who struggles to maintain the purity and
objectivity of her scientific atheism in the face of an
amazing variety of religious experiences. Epstein’s
depiction of the inner drama of Gibaydulina’s response
to the crumbling of the Soviet Union and her quest for a
new, creative atheism adds a tragic note to his
polyphonic work
An award-winning essayist and critic, Mikhail Epstein
has been compared to Jorge Luis Borges for his literary
inventiveness and to Walter Benjamin for his acute
observation of cultural phenomena. Transcending genres
and disciplines, Cries in the New Wilderness is a
brilliantly imaginative work of fiction that illuminates
the spiritual condition of the USSR as it reveals
unsuspected affinities between Russian and American
culture. In the mirror of Soviet society, we recognize
our own enthusiasm for alternative spiritual
experiences, our worship of technology, our doomsday
cults. We may also recognize that we ourselves are
participants in many of the sects Mikhail Epstein
describes, sects that seem at first fantastic and
outlandish, but prove to be the religious basis of our
own lives.
Epstein’s recent books in English include After the
Future: Paradoxes of Postmodernism and Contemporary
Russian Culture; Russian Postmodernism: New
Perspectives on Post-Soviet Culture (with two
coauthors); and Transcultural Experiments: Russian and
American Models of Creative Communication (with Ellen
Berry). He is the author of 16 books and approximately
400 essays and articles, translated into 14 languages.
In 2000, Mikhail Epstein was the recipient of the Liberty
Prize, established in 1999 and awarded once a year to
prominent Russian cultural figures who have made an
outstanding contribution to American society. He has
also received, among many other awards, the 1995
Social Innovations Award from the Institute for Social
Inventions for his elecvtronic Bank of New Ideas
(London) and the 1991 Andrei Belyi
Prize (St. Petersburg) for the
best work in literary criticism and scholarship.
Eve Adler is professor of Classics at Middlebury College
in Vermont. She has authored (with Vladimir Shlyakhov)
Russian Slang & Colloquial Expressions and translated
from German Philosophy and Law by Leo Strauss.