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Not my will but thine be done: Church versus magic in contemporary Russia
Authors:Galina Lindquist
Affiliation:Dept. of Social Anthropology , University of Stockholm , 106 91, Stockholm, Sweden E-mail: aatmare@hotmail.com
Abstract:In contemporary Russia, the Orthodox Church has started to assume its traditional but long‐lost role as a guardian of morality and a source of coherent ontological foundations. At the same time, magic and alternative healing have become pervasive and conspicuously public phenomena, thriving on the new institutions of the market and the free media. The article examines the nature of ideological offensive deployed by the Russian Church against magic and healing. It suggests that the controversy between Church and magic reflects conflicting ontologies of self and incompatible constructions of agency inherent in these respective cultural fields. It argues that magic and healing are built on the Western models of agency as empowerment of an autonomous individualistic self, and explores contrasting models of agency offered by the Orthodox Christianity. In the light of this argument, seemingly premodern practices of healing and magic appear as phenomena deeply embedded in globalised modernity.
Keywords:Russia  healing  magic  Russian Orthodox Church  self  agency  humility
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