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Materiality and Cosmology: Old Georgian Churches as Sacred, Sublime, and Secular Objects

Materiality and Cosmology: Old Georgian Churches as Sacred, Sublime, and Secular Objects

Authors :
Paul Manning
Source :
Ethnos. 73:327-360
Publication Year :
2008
Publisher :
Informa UK Limited, 2008.

Abstract

Discourses about Georgian churches have since the nineteenth century treated the material quality of'ancientness’ associated with existing churches as being among their essential defining properties. This paper first explores how different material qualisigns of churches, including oldness and qualisigns attendant on oldness, allow churches to be interpreted as secular objects, by ordering them with theatres (as expressive of'civilization'), the natural landscape (expressive of an aesthetics of the sublime) or other monuments, including texts (expressive of culture). One result of such discourses is that the contemporary Orthodox Church finds it difficult to have ‘new’ churches accepted as being churches at all. These nineteenth‐century discourses thus provide a context for the complex and contested reception of old and new Orthodox churches, as well as other religious structures, such as mountain shrines, which have a more ambiguous relation with Orthodoxy.

Details

ISSN :
1469588X and 00141844
Volume :
73
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Ethnos
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........1565dbc70856d36ce7a317d55af22bc1
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1080/00141840802324011