Volume 5 2011
Gendering the History of Spiritualities and Secularisms in
Southeastern Europe
Guest Editors: Pam Ballinger and Kristen Ghodsee
Scholars of religion have increasingly brought secularism within
the framework of critical studies of spirituality, analyzing the
dialogic relationship between religions and secularisms past and
present. This emerging field of "postsecularist" studies examines
the multiple meanings and practices that different cultures and
societies attach to the concepts of "religion," "faith," and
"piety." The pieces presented in this special issue of Aspasia
contribute to these larger academic debates by focusing on the
multiethnic and historically pluralistic region of Southeastern
Europe, an area too often ignored in larger scholarly discussions
that have focused primarily on Western Europe and the so-called
Third World. More important, this volume demonstrates how
secularization projects are intricately interwoven with gender
relations in any given society. Collectively, the contributions
urge readers to draw connections between the shifting spiritual
cartographies, state formations, and definitions of appropriate
masculinity and femininity of particular Southeastern European
societies.
Additional sections of this volume include nine Forum
contributions about regional women's and gender studies, two review
essays, book reviews, and an In Memoriam of Richard Stites, the
influential historian of women in Russia.
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