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ID152477
Title ProperLiminal” orthodoxies on the margins of empire
Other Title Informationtwentieth-century “home-grown” religious movements in the republic of Moldova
LanguageENG
AuthorKapaló, James
Summary / Abstract (Note)In the 20th century, the Russian Orthodox Church, the Romanian Orthodox Church, and the Soviet atheist state each pursued missions that attempted to transform Moldovans into loyal and trustworthy subjects and to integrate them into new state structures. This article explores the “liminal” character of Moldovan identities forged on the Russian and Romanian borderlands through the prism of Moldova's “home-grown” religious movements. Grass-roots movements led by charismatic and “trickster” religious figures “played” with dichotomies of the hidden and the revealed, innovation and tradition, and human and divine, succeeding in transforming the subject positions of whole segments of Moldovan peasant society. The resulting forms of “liminal” Orthodoxy have proved enduring, perpetually critiquing and transgressing canonical norms from the margins and subverting the discourses and narratives that seek to “harmonize” identities and to consolidate nation, state, and church in the Republic of Moldova.
`In' analytical NoteNationalism and Ethnic Politics Vol. 23, No.1; Jan-Mar 2017: p.33-51
Journal SourceNationalism and Ethnic Politics Vol: 23 No 1
Key WordsReligious Movements ;  Liminal ;  Republic of Moldova ;  Orthodoxies ;  Margins of Empire


 
 
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