Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Contributors
- 1 Introduction: Vernacular religion, generic expressions and the dynamics of belief
- PART I Belief as Practice
- 2 Everyday, fast and feast: Household work and the production of time in pre-modern Russian Orthodox Karelia
- 3 How to make a shrine with your own hands: Local holy places and vernacular religion in Russia
- 4 ‘I make my saints work …’: A Hungarian holy healer's identity reflected in autobiographical stories and folk narratives
- 5 Chronic illness and the negotiation of vernacular religious belief
- PART II Traditions of Narrated Belief
- PART III Relationships between Humans and Others
- PART IV Creation and Maintenance of Community and Identity
- PART V Theoretical Reflections and Manifestations of the Vernacular
- Index
3 - How to make a shrine with your own hands: Local holy places and vernacular religion in Russia
from PART I - Belief as Practice
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Contributors
- 1 Introduction: Vernacular religion, generic expressions and the dynamics of belief
- PART I Belief as Practice
- 2 Everyday, fast and feast: Household work and the production of time in pre-modern Russian Orthodox Karelia
- 3 How to make a shrine with your own hands: Local holy places and vernacular religion in Russia
- 4 ‘I make my saints work …’: A Hungarian holy healer's identity reflected in autobiographical stories and folk narratives
- 5 Chronic illness and the negotiation of vernacular religious belief
- PART II Traditions of Narrated Belief
- PART III Relationships between Humans and Others
- PART IV Creation and Maintenance of Community and Identity
- PART V Theoretical Reflections and Manifestations of the Vernacular
- Index
Summary
During the last decades of the twentieth century, the study of popular religious cultures in ethnology, folkloristics and historical anthropology underwent serious changes related to the crisis of dogmatic, institutional and systematic explanations of religious folklife. The changes are particularly obvious in the rejection of the residualistic ‘two-tiered model’ (as Peter Brown has called it) (Brown 1981) which presumes opposition between ‘Christianity’ and ‘paganism’, ‘official’ and ‘folk’ religion, ‘religion’ and ‘magic’ and so on. Furthermore, it has appeared that borderlines between various confessions and denominations, which usually play an important role in constructing and maintaining religious identity, do not impede the diffusion and interaction of practical forms of everyday religious activity. Today, folklorists and ethnologists prefer to discuss ‘vernacular’ (Primiano 1995: 37–56) or ‘local’ (Christian 1981) religions or ‘religious praxis’ (Panchenko 2002), on the one hand, and norms, institutions and other forms of representation and legitimization of power and social authority in the religious domain, on the other. As to the methodological strategies that dominate in the study of religious phenomena in contemporary folkloristics and ethnology, they, as a rule, proceed either from various sociological theories and approaches (elaborated by Émile Durkheim, Victor Turner, Mary Douglas et al.) or from contemporary cognitive anthropology (for example Boyer 1999: 53–72; 2001).
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Vernacular Religion in Everyday LifeExpressions of Belief, pp. 42 - 62Publisher: Acumen PublishingPrint publication year: 2012