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\u27s "home-grown" religious movements. Grassroots 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" Ort...
To legitimize separation from Moldova, Transnistrian elites have been constructing a civic Transnist...
This Article seeks to examine the Russia’s recent interest in uplifting the status of Orthodox churc...
The paper is devoted to the phenomenon of the “communist shift” in the mass Orthodox culture of the ...
This research is part of the project Creative Agency and Religious Minorities: Hidden Galleries in t...
This paper discusses an ethnographic research carried out in the Republic of Moldova, within an epar...
Among the post-Soviet independent states, the Republic of Moldova (RM) seems to be one especially ri...
My work examines how former Soviet atheists have discovered and engaged with their national religiou...
In this work I aim to give an overview of the main historical events which have shaped Moldovan hist...
Prior to being annexed into the Soviet Union in 1940, Moldova had been united with Romania. Between ...
The problem of ethnic minorities became the actual issue with the geopolitical transformations of 19...
The theoretical framework of this study into the contested identity of the Moldavian population foll...
Drawing on new archival sources, official publications, and oral histories, I challenge the self-por...
Brock, D. HeywardWallachia, Moldova, and Transylvania, the ancestral principalities of modern Romani...
The term domestication has been used by a number of scholars of religion in Eastern Europe to descri...
The copyright for individual articles in both the print and online version of the Anthropology of Ea...
To legitimize separation from Moldova, Transnistrian elites have been constructing a civic Transnist...
This Article seeks to examine the Russia’s recent interest in uplifting the status of Orthodox churc...
The paper is devoted to the phenomenon of the “communist shift” in the mass Orthodox culture of the ...
This research is part of the project Creative Agency and Religious Minorities: Hidden Galleries in t...
This paper discusses an ethnographic research carried out in the Republic of Moldova, within an epar...
Among the post-Soviet independent states, the Republic of Moldova (RM) seems to be one especially ri...
My work examines how former Soviet atheists have discovered and engaged with their national religiou...
In this work I aim to give an overview of the main historical events which have shaped Moldovan hist...
Prior to being annexed into the Soviet Union in 1940, Moldova had been united with Romania. Between ...
The problem of ethnic minorities became the actual issue with the geopolitical transformations of 19...
The theoretical framework of this study into the contested identity of the Moldavian population foll...
Drawing on new archival sources, official publications, and oral histories, I challenge the self-por...
Brock, D. HeywardWallachia, Moldova, and Transylvania, the ancestral principalities of modern Romani...
The term domestication has been used by a number of scholars of religion in Eastern Europe to descri...
The copyright for individual articles in both the print and online version of the Anthropology of Ea...
To legitimize separation from Moldova, Transnistrian elites have been constructing a civic Transnist...
This Article seeks to examine the Russia’s recent interest in uplifting the status of Orthodox churc...
The paper is devoted to the phenomenon of the “communist shift” in the mass Orthodox culture of the ...