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Monastic Dimension of Identity Politics: Global Case Studies from the Premodern Period New edition [Kõva köide]

Edited by (Connecticut College, Department of History and Global Islamic Studies Program), Edited by (Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds), Edited by (University of Palermo)

This volume comparatively explores how members of “monastic” communities, broadly understood, developed practical strategies for the construction of identity across a range of religious traditions in the greater regions of premodern Europe and Asia. In particular, it seeks to understand how the production, distribution, and reception of hagiographic material (written, visual, and performative) served as a tool for the implementation of “monastic” dynamics of legitimation. This is accomplished by pursuing and developing a two-fold approach. At an empirical level, the volume expands our scholarly understanding of the cross-cultural processes that characterize religious communities’ notions of identity. At a meta-level, it furthers a re-evaluation of our taxonomy as it challenges established notions of categories such as “monk/monastic” and “hagiography.”



An empirical study on construction of identity by members of “monastic” communities across a plurality of religious traditions in pre-modern Europe and Asia.
Introduction, by Dean Accardi, Emilia Jamroziak, and Marco Papasidero


Chapter
1. Communal and Individual Monastic Identity in Gregory the Greats
Dialogues, by Nikolas Hoel


Chapter
2. Hagiography and Monastic Legitimacy in the Translation of St
Helenas Relics to Hautvillers, by Marco Papasidero


Chapter
3. The Many Hagiographical Identities of the Chinese Buddhist Nun
Zhujin, by Jennifer Eichman


Chapter
4. Hagiography Beyond the Saints: Redefining Genre and Kashmiri
Identity through Sanctifying Narrative, by Dean Accardi


Chapter
5. A Re-membered Community: The Myth of akara and the Making of the
Smrtas, by Nabanjan Maitra


Chapter
6. The Ascetic and the Ecstatic: Examples of Identity Construction in
the Rmnand Sampradya, by Daniela Bevilacqua


Conclusions. Negotiating the Holy across Time and Place, by Sita Steckel


Index
Marco Papasidero is Assistant Professor of History of Christianity and Churches at the University of Palermo. Dean Accardi is Assistant Professor of History at Connecticut College. Emilia Jamroziak is Professor of Medieval Religious History at the University of Leeds.