Memory and religion from a postsecular perspective. (2022)
- Record Type:
- Book
- Title:
- Memory and religion from a postsecular perspective. (2022)
- Main Title:
- Memory and religion from a postsecular perspective
- Further Information:
- Note: Edited by Zuzanna Bogumil, Yuliya Yurchuk.
- Editors:
- Bogumił, Zuzanna
Yurchuk, Yuliya - Contents:
- 1. Introduction: Memory and Religion from a Postsecular Perspective Zuzanna Bogumil and Yuliya Yurchuk Part 1: Memory and Religion: Theoretical Considerations 2. Religion and Collective Memory of the Last Century: General Reflections and Russian Vicissitudes Aleksandr Agadjanian 2. Sacred Religio-Secular Symbols, National Myths and Collective Memory Geneviève Zubrzycki Part 2: Postsecularity and Politics of Memory 3. The Armenian Genocide: Extermination, Memory, Sacralization Adam Pomieciński 4. Building a Patrimonial Church: How the Orthodox Churches in Ukraine Use the Past Yuliya Yurchuk 5. ‘God is in Truth, Not in Power!’: The Re-militarization of the Cult of St Alexander Nevsky in Contemporary Russian Cultural Memory Liliya Berezhnaya 6. The Martyrdom of Jozef Tiso: The Entanglements of the Sacred and Secular in Post-War Catholic Memories Agáta Šústová Drelová 7. Remembering and Enforced Forgetting: The Dynamics of Remembering Cardinal József Mindszenty in the Cold War Decades Réka Földváryné Kiss Part 3: Post-Conflict Memories 8. Evocation and the June Fourth Tiananmen Candlelight Vigil: A Ritual-Theological Hermeneutics Lap Yan Kung 9. Religious Echoes of the Donbas Conflict: The Discourses of the Christian, Muslim and Jewish Communities in Ukraine Nadia Zasanska 10. Official Quests, Vernacular Answers: The Macedonian Orthodox Church – Ohrid Archbishopric (MOC-OA) as a Memory Actor in the Post-Conflict Republic of North Macedonia (2001–19) Naum Trajanovski 11.1. Introduction: Memory and Religion from a Postsecular Perspective Zuzanna Bogumil and Yuliya Yurchuk Part 1: Memory and Religion: Theoretical Considerations 2. Religion and Collective Memory of the Last Century: General Reflections and Russian Vicissitudes Aleksandr Agadjanian 2. Sacred Religio-Secular Symbols, National Myths and Collective Memory Geneviève Zubrzycki Part 2: Postsecularity and Politics of Memory 3. The Armenian Genocide: Extermination, Memory, Sacralization Adam Pomieciński 4. Building a Patrimonial Church: How the Orthodox Churches in Ukraine Use the Past Yuliya Yurchuk 5. ‘God is in Truth, Not in Power!’: The Re-militarization of the Cult of St Alexander Nevsky in Contemporary Russian Cultural Memory Liliya Berezhnaya 6. The Martyrdom of Jozef Tiso: The Entanglements of the Sacred and Secular in Post-War Catholic Memories Agáta Šústová Drelová 7. Remembering and Enforced Forgetting: The Dynamics of Remembering Cardinal József Mindszenty in the Cold War Decades Réka Földváryné Kiss Part 3: Post-Conflict Memories 8. Evocation and the June Fourth Tiananmen Candlelight Vigil: A Ritual-Theological Hermeneutics Lap Yan Kung 9. Religious Echoes of the Donbas Conflict: The Discourses of the Christian, Muslim and Jewish Communities in Ukraine Nadia Zasanska 10. Official Quests, Vernacular Answers: The Macedonian Orthodox Church – Ohrid Archbishopric (MOC-OA) as a Memory Actor in the Post-Conflict Republic of North Macedonia (2001–19) Naum Trajanovski 11. Negotiating the Sacred at Non-Sites of Memory. The Religious Imaginary of Post-Genocidal Society Karina Jarzyńska Part 4: Media and Postsecular Memory 12. The Crimean Tatars’ Memory of Deportation and Islam Elmira Muratova 13. The Soviet Past in Contemporary Orthodox Hymnography and Iconography Per-Arne Bodin 14. Whose Church is It? The Nonreligious Use of Religious Architecture in Eastern Germany Agnieszka Halemba Part 5: Transnational and Vernacular Memories 15. The Political Use of the Cult of St Tryphon of Pechenga and Its Potential as a Bridge-Builder in the Arctic Elina Kahla 16. ‘Vernacular’ and ‘Official’ Memories: Looking Beyond the Annual Hasidic Pilgrimages to Uman Alla Marchenko 17. Memory as a Religious Mission? Religion and Nation in Local Commemoration Practices in Contemporary Poland Małgorzata Głowacka-Grajper 18. Critical Juxtaposition in the Postwar Japanese Mnemoscape: Saint Maksymilian Kolbe of Auschwitz and the Atomic Bomb Victims of Nagasaki Jie-Hyun Lim Afterword. From ‘Religion as a Chain of Memory’ to Memory from a Postsecular Perspective Kathy Rousselet … (more)
- Edition:
- 1st
- Publisher Details:
- London : Routledge
- Publication Date:
- 2022
- Extent:
- 1 online resource, illustrations (black and white)
- Subjects:
- 306.09
Collective memory
Religion and sociology
Postsecularism - Languages:
- English
- ISBNs:
- 9781000543308
9781000543254
9781003264750 - Related ISBNs:
- 9781032206981
- Notes:
- Note: Description based on CIP data; resource not viewed.
- Access Rights:
- Legal Deposit; Only available on premises controlled by the deposit library and to one user at any one time; The Legal Deposit Libraries (Non-Print Works) Regulations (UK).
- Access Usage:
- Restricted: Printing from this resource is governed by The Legal Deposit Libraries (Non-Print Works) Regulations (UK) and UK copyright law currently in force.
- View Content:
- Available online (eLD content is only available in our Reading Rooms) ↗
- Physical Locations:
- British Library HMNTS - ELD.DS.672646
- Ingest File:
- 10_012.xml