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Converging Worlds

- Religion and Community in Peasant Russia, 1861–1917
Af: Chris Chulos Engelsk Hardback

Converging Worlds

- Religion and Community in Peasant Russia, 1861–1917
Af: Chris Chulos Engelsk Hardback
Tjek vores konkurrenters priser

Converging Worlds describes the interplay between peasant religious life and the broader social and cultural transformation of late tsarist Russia. Through a detailed examination of religious practices and ceremonies among the peasantry in the province of Voronezh, Chulos challenges existing conceptions of religion in Russia and sheds new light on the development of modern national identity.

Age-old rituals, customs, and beliefs helped peasants to adapt to industrialization and modernization by providing a spiritual and psychological framework for change. The dependable rhythms of village holidays and rituals marking the stages of human life gave the peasantry a sense of stability and comfort as their traditions slowly unraveled in the face of urban culture. Encouraged by educated Russians who traveled the countryside in search of the ideal national type, peasant communities began to reconstruct tales of their village origin. These stories linked people in remote locales to the central events and heroes of imperial Russian history.

Village and urban cultural worlds clashed over peasant demands for the devolution of political, cultural, and social authority. By the time revolutionary fervor ignited the countryside in 1905, the village faithful demonstrated a new confidence in their ability to shape their own future—and Russia''s—as they agitated for greater control over local religious life.

By 1917, peasant disenchantment reached new heights and helped to create a new popular Orthodoxy that no longer looked to tsar and church as valid sources of authority and identity. As peasant believers took control of their local religious life, they inadvertently aided antireligious activists in driving religion underground, thereby estranging future generations from a fundamental pillar of their cultural heritage.

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Converging Worlds describes the interplay between peasant religious life and the broader social and cultural transformation of late tsarist Russia. Through a detailed examination of religious practices and ceremonies among the peasantry in the province of Voronezh, Chulos challenges existing conceptions of religion in Russia and sheds new light on the development of modern national identity.

Age-old rituals, customs, and beliefs helped peasants to adapt to industrialization and modernization by providing a spiritual and psychological framework for change. The dependable rhythms of village holidays and rituals marking the stages of human life gave the peasantry a sense of stability and comfort as their traditions slowly unraveled in the face of urban culture. Encouraged by educated Russians who traveled the countryside in search of the ideal national type, peasant communities began to reconstruct tales of their village origin. These stories linked people in remote locales to the central events and heroes of imperial Russian history.

Village and urban cultural worlds clashed over peasant demands for the devolution of political, cultural, and social authority. By the time revolutionary fervor ignited the countryside in 1905, the village faithful demonstrated a new confidence in their ability to shape their own future—and Russia''s—as they agitated for greater control over local religious life.

By 1917, peasant disenchantment reached new heights and helped to create a new popular Orthodoxy that no longer looked to tsar and church as valid sources of authority and identity. As peasant believers took control of their local religious life, they inadvertently aided antireligious activists in driving religion underground, thereby estranging future generations from a fundamental pillar of their cultural heritage.

Produktdetaljer
Sprog: Engelsk
Sider: 216
ISBN-13: 9780875803173
Indbinding: Hardback
Udgave:
ISBN-10: 0875803172
Kategori: Sovjetunionen
Udg. Dato: 7 okt 2003
Længde: 22mm
Bredde: 152mm
Højde: 229mm
Forlag: Cornell University Press
Oplagsdato: 7 okt 2003
Forfatter(e): Chris Chulos
Forfatter(e) Chris Chulos


Kategori Sovjetunionen


ISBN-13 9780875803173


Sprog Engelsk


Indbinding Hardback


Sider 216


Udgave


Længde 22mm


Bredde 152mm


Højde 229mm


Udg. Dato 7 okt 2003


Oplagsdato 7 okt 2003


Forlag Cornell University Press