2012
DOI: 10.1111/j.1548-1360.2012.01143.x
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MORE ALIVE THAN ALL THE LIVING: Sovereign Bodies and Cosmic Politics in Buddhist Siberia

Abstract: This article explores religious practice among Buryats, a Siberian people, through scholarship on sovereignty and the body. Under conditions of rapid social transformation such as those that accompanied the Russian Revolution, the Cold War, and the dissolution of the Soviet Union, certain religious bodies became key sites through which Buryats have negotiated their relationship with the Russian state and the larger Tibeto‐Mongol and Eurasian Buddhist worlds. Despite the Russian government's continuing reluctan… Show more

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Cited by 35 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…If the precarious world is speaking to us in heightened ethical registers, anthropologists were further interested in its proliferating Christian charismatic religious forms. Although a number of articles focus on a variety of religious practices ranging from Islamic (Adely ; Clarke ; Henig ; Mittermaier ) to indigenized Catholic (Tassi ), Siberian Buddhist (Bernstein ; BuckQuijada 2012), and popular Hindu (Singh ), the biggest cluster focuses on evangelical Christianity both far (Chua ; Eriksen ) and near (in the United States and England; see Brahinsky ; Engelke ; Jones ; Luhrman ; McGovern ). Two articles in particular speak to some of the themes raised in this review.…”
Section: Religious Ethicsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…If the precarious world is speaking to us in heightened ethical registers, anthropologists were further interested in its proliferating Christian charismatic religious forms. Although a number of articles focus on a variety of religious practices ranging from Islamic (Adely ; Clarke ; Henig ; Mittermaier ) to indigenized Catholic (Tassi ), Siberian Buddhist (Bernstein ; BuckQuijada 2012), and popular Hindu (Singh ), the biggest cluster focuses on evangelical Christianity both far (Chua ; Eriksen ) and near (in the United States and England; see Brahinsky ; Engelke ; Jones ; Luhrman ; McGovern ). Two articles in particular speak to some of the themes raised in this review.…”
Section: Religious Ethicsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Recent work on Buddhism has considered it in these three regional contexts and discusses themes such as the syncretism of Buddhism and shamanism in Tuva, the revival of religious practice and belief among the Kalmyks and the rediscovery of traditional religious elements and symbols in Buryatia (Walters 2001;Sinclair 2008;Bernstein 2011Bernstein , 2012Quijada 2012). I am interested here in the politics of religion-state relations at the regional and federal levels, a dynamic which is made complex by the marginal geographic position and numerically small populations of the groups which are historically linked to Buddhism as a form of religious practice.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“… 15 Compare Bernstein's (2012) “sovereign bodies,” which likewise draw on the authority of religion to supersede the borders between nation-states. …”
mentioning
confidence: 99%