Buch, Englisch, Band 14, 510 Seiten, Format (B × H): 166 mm x 238 mm, Gewicht: 948 g
Reihe: Social Sciences in Asia
Religion, Ideology and Transformations of Modernity
Buch, Englisch, Band 14, 510 Seiten, Format (B × H): 166 mm x 238 mm, Gewicht: 948 g
Reihe: Social Sciences in Asia
ISBN: 978-90-04-15822-1
Verlag: Brill
Autoren/Hrsg.
Fachgebiete
Weitere Infos & Material
Part 1: Converting States: Nationalism, Ritual, and Religious Identity
The Crisis of “Conversion” and Search for National Doctrine in Early Meiji Japan - Trent Maxey
Civic Faith and Hybrid Ritual in Nationalist China - Rebecca Nedostup
The Atmosphere of Conversion in Interwar Japan - Alan Tansman
Adamant And Treacherous: Serbian Historians On Religious Conversions - Bojan Aleksov
Part 2: Converting Institutions: Education, Media, and Mass Movements
Gender, Conversion, and Social Transformation: The American Discourse of Domesticity and the Origins of the Bulgarian Women’s Movement, 1857-1876 - Barbara Reeves-Ellington
Secular Conversion as a Turkish Revolutionary Project in the 1930s - Ertan Aydin
Some Consideration on the Building of an Ottoman Public Identity in the Nineteenth Century -Serif Mardin
Science Without Conscience: Unno Juza and Tenko of Convenience - Sari Kawana
Charismatic Entrepreneurship and Conversion: Oomoto Proselytization, 1916-1935 - Nancy Stalker
Part 3: Converting Selves: Translating Modern Identity
Translation and Conversion Beyond Western Modernity: Tolstoian Religion in Meiji Japan - Sho Konishi
Civilization and Its Discussants: Medeniyet and the Turkish Conversion to Modernism - Kevin Reinhart
The Double Bind of Race and Religion: The Conversion of the Dönme to Turkish Secular Nationalism - Marc Baer
The Body as the Locus of Religious Identity: Examples from Western India - James W. Laine
The Poetics of Conversion and the Problem of Translation in Endo Shusaku's Silence - Dennis Washburn
Part 4: Converting Others: Hybridity and the Problem of Sincerity
“Mass Movements” in South India, 1877-1936 - Eliza F. Kent
From Morals to Melancholy: How a Japanese Critic Rejected Bakin and Learned to Love Shakespeare - Patrick Caddeau
Hidden Believers, Hidden Apostates: The Phenomenon of Crypto-Jews and Crypto-Christians in the Middle East - Maurus Reinkowski
True Believers? Agency and Sincerity in Representations of “Mass Movement" Converts in 1930s India - Laura Dudley Jenkins
From Ideological Literature to a Literary Ideology: “Conversion” in Wartime Japan - James Dorsey