"This book opens a new research field in Balkan contextual theology. By embracing culturally rich traditions of the Western Balkans as its starting point, it explores their existential and theological bearings. Placed at the crossroads of civilizations and religions, this region has witnessed some of the worst atrocities of the 20th century. At the same time, it has produced unique textures of inter-cultural life. The volume addresses some of the most poignant phenomena endemic to the region, such as sevdalinka music, intimate forms of neighborhood, archetypes of 'sacred warriors,' the experience of democratic jet lag, collective melancholy, and intergenerational trauma. As the first book of this nature, it aims to encourage further development of contextual theological thinking in the region and promote its international reception"--
This book opens a new research field in Balkan contextual theology. By embracing culturally rich traditions of the Western Balkans as its starting point, it explores their existential and theological bearings.
This book opens a new research field in Balkan contextual theology. By embracing culturally rich traditions of the Western Balkans as its starting point, it explores their existential and theological bearings. Placed at the crossroads of civilisations and religions, this region has witnessed some of the worst atrocities of the 20th century. At the same time, it has produced unique textures of inter-cultural life. The volume addresses some of the most poignant phenomena endemic to the region, such as sevdalinka music, intimate forms of neighborhood, archetypes of sacred warriors, the experience of democratic jet lag, collective melancholy, and intergenerational trauma. As the first book of this nature, it aims to encourage further development of contextual theological thinking in the region and promote its international reception.
Introduction: Balkan the Unifier and Balkan the Divider
Stipe Odak and Zoran Grozdanov
Part I: Religion, Politics, Identity
1. Religion and National/Ethnic Identity Theological and Contextual
Positions in Islam
Enes Kari
2. Religion and National/Ethnic Identity Theological and Contextual
Positions in Orthodoxy
Vukain Milievi
3. Divided Ecumenism Christian Churches at the Fault Lines
Radmila Radi and Neven Vuki
4. IncarNation: On the Possibilities of Balkan Contextual Theology
Zoran Grozdanov
5. Gender and Religion in The Balkans: The Example of Croatia and Bosnia and
Herzegovina
Rebeka Ani and Zilka Spahi iljak
6. "Democratic Jet-Lag" and EUgoslav Yutopias
Davor Dalto
Part II: Violence, God, Memory
7. Prayer as the Curse: Religious Tabooization of God
Marko Vueti
8. Balkan Love Triangle God, Love, and Violence
Drago Boji and Viktor Ivani
9. Theology in the Spirit of Palanka: Catechism of Croatian Catholic and
Serbian Orthodox Ethnonationalist Imaginaries
Branko Sekuli
10. Lost Bodies, Missing Persons and Extended Mourning
Jadranka Brni
11. Identities Built on the Memory of Wrongdoing and Ecumenism of Compassion
Ivan arevi
12. The Grace of Not Remembering: Painful Memories and Their Theological
Implications
Miroslav Volf
Part III: Culture, Life, Longing
13. Inat, the Explosive Instinct of Freedom: Towards the Theology of Spite
Amila Kahrovi Posavljak
14. Other God or God of the Other: Sevdah, Queer Laments and the Balkan
Religious Imagery
Miljenko Jergovi
15. Neither Exclusionary Religious Nationalisms, Nor Abstract Religious
Humanisms: Belonging and Border-Living in the Balkans
Slavica Jakeli
16. Komiluk: The Starting Point of the Balkan Contextual Theology
Stipe Odak
17. The Rootless God Theology of Emigrations
Alida Bremer and Ivana Bodroi
18. Paradise Lost: Theology of Nostalgia and Hope
Josip Novakovich
Stipe Odak is a Lecturer and Postdoctoral Researcher at the Université Catholique de Louvain (Belgium).
Zoran Grozdanov is an Assistant Professor at the University Centre for Protestant Theology Matthias Flacius Illyricus at the University in Zagreb, Croatia.