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Entangled Interactions between Religion and National Consciousness in Central and Eastern Europe

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This book elucidates the complicated relationship between religion and national consciousness in the modern world, shedding light on various cases in Central and Eastern Europe. Though those analys...
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  • 18 August 2020
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This book elucidates the complicated relationship between religion and national consciousness in the modern world, highlighting various cases within Central and Eastern Europe. Through these analyses, contributors demonstrate how religion, far from disappearing, strongly impacted the emerging national consciousness. Starting with the pre-modern era, essays examine the long-term transformation of religious, political, and social situations of the region. In addition, the book considers the impact of imperial powers, which tended to be linked with a universal religion. Light is also shed on the multifaceted nature of nations, which contribute to a new vision of the historical transformation of the region that enriches the general theories of nationalism.  

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Price: $109.00
Pages: 216
Publisher: Academic Studies Press
Imprint: Academic Studies Press
Series: Lithuanian Studies without Borders
Publication Date: 18 August 2020
Trim Size: 9.21 X 6.14 in
ISBN: 9781644693568
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: European history, Comparative religion, Religion and politics, History of religion, Christian Churches, denominations, groups
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“[M]any of [the essays] offer excellent treatment of particular research questions and shed light on previously understudied topics.”

– Sebastian Rimestad, Ab Imperio


“This volume of collected essays offers an opportunity to investigate key questions regarding imperial understandings of faith, confessional divides and loyalties, and the relationship between national culture and religion in a space less known to historians of religion in Europe despite a rich specialist historiography. It ventures beyond well-trodden concerns for Polish Catholicism and Russian Orthodoxy to consider varied religious and national identities in successive multi-ethnic states of central and eastern Europe. … Collectively, these essays provide critical insight into evolving, elite literature on national identity and remind us of the important function that media plays in disseminating and consolidating sentiment. … The volume’s assertion of regional differences among Uniates as well as adherents of other faiths is especially compelling. … [T]he diversity of expression is readily apparent in the capable research of these experts.”

– Matthew D. Pauly, Michigan State University, The Slavic Review (Spring 2022)


Yoko Aoshima studies modern history of the Russian Empire with a focus on imperial policies, especially in the field of education and social transformation. She has taught at Aichi University and Kobe University, and recently joined as an associate professor at the Slavic-Eurasian Research Center, Hokkaido University.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements

Introduction
Yoko Aoshima (Kobe University, Japan)

1. Uniate Martyr Josaphat and his Role as a Confessionalizing, Integrating, and Nationalizing Element
Chiho Fukushima (Tokyo University of Foreign Studies, Japan)

2. Conversion and Culture in Russia’s Western Borderlands, 1800-55
Barbara Skinner (Indiana State University, US)

3. Religion in the Rhetoric of the 1863–64 Uprising
Zita Medišauskienė (Lithuanian Institute of History, Lithuania)

4. Orthodox Christianity Emerging as an Ethical Principle in School Education in the 1860-70s
Yoko Aoshima (Kobe University, Japan)

5. The Roman Catholic Clergy and the Notion of Lithuanian National Identity
Vilma Žaltauskaitė (Lithuanian Institute of History, Lithuania)

6. The Nobility in the Lithuanian National Project in the Late Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Century: The Approach of the Catholic Clergy
Olga Mastianica-Stankevič (Lithuanian Institute of History, Lithuania)

7. Praising Christ, Serving the Nation: The Ideology of the Catholic Newspaper Biełarus (1913-15)
Aliaksandr Bystryk (Central European University, Belarus)

8. Defining the Public Sphere by Organic Boundaries—Syncretism in Creating National Culture in the Nineteenth-Century Habsburg Monarchy
Taku Shinohara (Tokyo University of Foreign Studies, Japan)

9. “Building” Nationalism: St. Elisabeth Church in Lemberg
Dominika Rank (Ukrainian Catholic University, Ukraine)

10. Local Governance and Religion in the Kingdom of Poland, 1905–14: Multireligious Relief Actions for Unemployed Workers in Łódź
Kenshi Fukumoto (Kwansei Gakuin University, Japan)

11. Max Weber and Eastern Europe: The Religious Background to Modern Nationalism
Hajime Konno (Aichi Prefectural University, Japan)

Index