For centuries and across continents religious communities have shaped the ways in which individuals position themselves within their societies. While historians and anthropologists have increasingly focused on the phenomenon of religious conversion, studies on the relationship between conversion and imperial rule have remained sporadic and geographically isolated. To remedy this, the present volume adopts a global and comparative approach. Focusing on efforts to spread Christianity and responses from different faith communities, the authors engage in a debate that goes beyond specific confessions or imperial configurations. The case studies presented here powerfully illustrate the multidirectional nature of religious conversion practices. They demonstrate how local structures both enabled and limited the changes brought about by conversion. The volume also addresses notions of subjectivity within convert communities which shaped their reactions to imperial strategies. “Religious Conversion and Imperial Rule” thus illuminates the interplay between power, conversion, agency, and social transformation.
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Jahrhundert, Religionsgeschichte, Konversion, Imperium, Newly Converted, Religious Conversion, Imperial Rule/Startseite/Startseite/Wissenschaft/Startseite/Wissenschaft/Geschichte/wissenschaft/wissenschaft/geschichtee0000000000000000000000000000296e0000000000000000000000000000302e0000000000000000000000000000361e0000000000000000000000000118172e0000000000000000000000000000296e0000000000000000000000000118172e0000000000000000000000000000302CampusFor centuries and across continents religious communities have shaped the ways in which individuals position themselves within their societies. While historians and anthropologists have increasingly focused on the phenomenon of religious conversion, studies on the relationship between conversion and imperial rule have remained sporadic and geographically isolated. To remedy this, the present volume adopts a global and comparative approach. Focusing on efforts to spread Christianity and responses from different faith communities, the authors engage in a debate that goes beyond specific confessions or imperial configurations. The case studies presented here powerfully illustrate the multidirectional nature of religious conversion practices. They demonstrate how local structures both enabled and limited the changes brought about by conversion. The volume also addresses notions of subjectivity within convert communities which shaped their reactions to imperial strategies. “Religious Conversion and Imperial Rule” thus illuminates the interplay between power, conversion, agency, and social transformation.