Vernacular Beliefs and Official Traditional Religion: The position and meaning of Mari worldview in the current context
Vernacular religion connected with the clan was expected to adapt in the context of globalisation and the vanishing ideals of traditional (tribal) societies. But at the turn of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries a revival of European ‘paganism’ has appeared. A return to vernacular beliefs is n...
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doaj-126609e2efed429888effafa4c215eea2020-11-25T00:29:56ZengDonner InstituteApproaching Religion1799-31212014-05-014110.30664/ar.67541Vernacular Beliefs and Official Traditional Religion: The position and meaning of Mari worldview in the current contextTatiana Alybina0University of TartuVernacular religion connected with the clan was expected to adapt in the context of globalisation and the vanishing ideals of traditional (tribal) societies. But at the turn of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries a revival of European ‘paganism’ has appeared. A return to vernacular beliefs is not only happening in the mass religious mind of some Eastern European and Asian people, but also in the romantic mythologemes which are being created by national elites. Lithuanians, who were Christianised in the fourteenth century – the last nation in the Baltic region to undergo this process – recall their heathen roots; Ukrainians revive their rodnoverie – indigenous beliefs – in an attempt to resist the Orthodox and Catholic Churches. Apart from this there are other pre-Christian faith organisations in Latvia, Estonia, Germany and England. The traditions of the pre-Christian societies attract people through their apparent proximity to communal peasant culture. Followers of some of these beliefs are interested in popularising Viking mythology. The activities of druids and adherents of the Northern European Asatru religion revive ancient festivals and ceremonies. The popularisation of these movements can be seen as an attempt to resist an encroachment of the modern, globalised, urbane society.https://journal.fi/ar/article/view/67541Mari (European people)PaganismGlobalizationIndigenous peoplesRussiaFinno-Ugrians |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Tatiana Alybina |
spellingShingle |
Tatiana Alybina Vernacular Beliefs and Official Traditional Religion: The position and meaning of Mari worldview in the current context Approaching Religion Mari (European people) Paganism Globalization Indigenous peoples Russia Finno-Ugrians |
author_facet |
Tatiana Alybina |
author_sort |
Tatiana Alybina |
title |
Vernacular Beliefs and Official Traditional Religion: The position and meaning of Mari worldview in the current context |
title_short |
Vernacular Beliefs and Official Traditional Religion: The position and meaning of Mari worldview in the current context |
title_full |
Vernacular Beliefs and Official Traditional Religion: The position and meaning of Mari worldview in the current context |
title_fullStr |
Vernacular Beliefs and Official Traditional Religion: The position and meaning of Mari worldview in the current context |
title_full_unstemmed |
Vernacular Beliefs and Official Traditional Religion: The position and meaning of Mari worldview in the current context |
title_sort |
vernacular beliefs and official traditional religion: the position and meaning of mari worldview in the current context |
publisher |
Donner Institute |
series |
Approaching Religion |
issn |
1799-3121 |
publishDate |
2014-05-01 |
description |
Vernacular religion connected with the clan was expected to adapt in the context of globalisation and the vanishing ideals of traditional (tribal) societies. But at the turn of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries a revival of European ‘paganism’ has appeared. A return to vernacular beliefs is not only happening in the mass religious mind of some Eastern European and Asian people, but also in the romantic mythologemes which are being created by national elites. Lithuanians, who were Christianised in the fourteenth century – the last nation in the Baltic region to undergo this process – recall their heathen roots; Ukrainians revive their rodnoverie – indigenous beliefs – in an attempt to resist the Orthodox and Catholic Churches. Apart from this there are other pre-Christian faith organisations in Latvia, Estonia, Germany and England. The traditions of the pre-Christian societies attract people through their apparent proximity to communal peasant culture. Followers of some of these beliefs are interested in popularising Viking mythology. The activities of druids and adherents of the Northern European Asatru religion revive ancient festivals and ceremonies. The popularisation of these movements can be seen as an attempt to resist an encroachment of the modern, globalised, urbane society. |
topic |
Mari (European people) Paganism Globalization Indigenous peoples Russia Finno-Ugrians |
url |
https://journal.fi/ar/article/view/67541 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT tatianaalybina vernacularbeliefsandofficialtraditionalreligionthepositionandmeaningofmariworldviewinthecurrentcontext |
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