Inochentism and Orthodox Christianity

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A01=James A. Kapalo
Anti-religious Campaign
apocalyptic movement
apocalyptic sects history
Author_James A. Kapalo
Balta Movement
Category=QRMB2
Category=QRMB8
Category=QRVS1
Christian Apocrypha
Eastern European religion
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
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Father Ioan
Gendarme Commander
Gendarme Post
Holy Man
Holy Synod
Inochentism
Interwar Romania
Khrushchev Anti-religious Campaign
Lake Onega
Long House
Marshal Antonescu
minority faith movements
Missionary Priests
Moscow Patriarchate
Nichifor Crainic
Orthodox Church
religious persecution studies
Romanian Orthodox Church
Russian Orthodox Church
Russian revolutionary period
social marginalisation
social marginalisation research
Soviet era dissidents
Soviet Moldavia
True Orthodox Church
twentieth century Moldavian religious dissent
Visionary Texts
Wall Hangings
Wind Mills
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9781472432186
  • Weight: 710g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 06 Jun 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This book explores the history and evolution of Inochentism, a controversial new religious movement that emerged in the Russian and Romanian borderlands of what is now Moldova and Ukraine in the context of the Russian revolutionary period. Inochentism centres around the charismatic preaching of Inochentie, a monk of the Orthodox Church, who inspired an apocalyptic movement that was soon labelled heretical by the Orthodox Church and persecuted as socially and politically subversive by Soviet and Romanian state authorities.

Inochentism and Orthodox Christianity charts the emergence and development of Inochentism through the twentieth century based on hagiographies, oral testimonies, press reports, state legislation and a wealth of previously unstudied police and secret police archival material. Focusing on the role that religious persecution and social marginalization played in the transformation of this understudied and much vilified group, the author explores a series of counter-narratives that challenge the mainstream historiography of the movement and highlight the significance of the concept of ‘liminality’ in relation to the study of new religious movements and Orthodoxy.

This book constitutes a systematic historical study of an Eastern European ‘home-grown’ religious movement taking a ‘grass-roots’ approach to the problem of minority religious identities in twentieth century Eastern Europe. Consequently, it will be of great interest to scholars of new religions movements, religious history and Russian and Eastern European studies.

James A. Kapaló is Senior Lecturer in the Study of Religions at University College Cork, Ireland and co-Director of the Marginalised and Endangered Worldviews Study Centre. He is author of Text, Context and Performance: Gagauz Folk Religion in Discourse and Practice (2011).

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