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Religious Syncretism and Cultural Pluralism along the Central and East Asian Silk Road – New Discoveries and Venues for Research

Stoyanov, Yuri

Religious Syncretism and Cultural Pluralism along the Central and East Asian Silk Road – New Discoveries and Venues for Research Thumbnail


Authors

Yuri Stoyanov



Abstract

The current and continuing shifts in frequently contrasting „official” and popular stances multiculturalism and religious pluralism in Europe are clearly symptomatic of the growing crisis of state multiculturalism in Europe, a crisis increasingly visible on a variety of political and cultural levels. These developments also indicate that cultural and religious pluralism cannot be approached and understood solely in the framework of European modernity. The traditional Eurocentric lens certainly need to be widened and transcended to consider also comparable pre-modern and nonEuropean phenomena, involving international networks promoting inter-religious and inter-cultural dialogue and co-existence. The historic trans-continental routes linking the Mediterranean and East Asia, commonly labelled the Silk Road, and the dynamics of the wide-ranging religious and cultural exchange and syncretism during the active phases of its millennia-old history, certainly represents the most characteristic and illustrative of these pre-modern globalization phenomena. In the fields of religious and cultural history the antique and late antique syncretistic and pluralist cultures which existed along the Central Asian sectors of the Silk Road and the transmutations of Manichaeism in contact with Buddhism, Taoism and Confucianism in China (until its absorption into Chinese popular religions) is of vital significance for understanding the nature and trajectories of inter-religious and inter-cultural relations and globalizing exchange in pre-modern and nonEuropean settings. The mounting evidence of Taocisation of Christian and Manichaean notions and beliefs in pre-modern Chinese contexts indicate a dynamic of religio-cultural trasplantability and translatability which are undoubtedly of obvious relevance to the contemporary global dilemmas and crises of multiculturalism and religious diversity, rapidly intensifying in an increasingly interconnected and inter-dependent world.

Citation

Stoyanov, Y. (2017, June). Religious Syncretism and Cultural Pluralism along the Central and East Asian Silk Road – New Discoveries and Venues for Research. Presented at Fourth International Conference on Chinese Studies: The Silk Road, Sofia

Presentation Conference Type Conference Paper (published)
Conference Name Fourth International Conference on Chinese Studies: The Silk Road
Start Date Jun 1, 2017
End Date Jun 2, 2017
Acceptance Date Jul 28, 2017
Publication Date Jan 4, 2018
Deposit Date Aug 2, 2023
Publicly Available Date Aug 2, 2023
Print ISSN 1314-9865
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 4
Pages 291-300
Series ISSN 1314-9865
Book Title The Silk Road, Collection of the Fourth Conference on Chinese Studies
Keywords Silk Road, Central Asia, Sogdiana, China, Archaeology, Cultural Interactions, Syncretism,
Publisher URL https://confuciusinstitute.bg/images/2020/02/The-Silk-Road-2017.pdf
Additional Information Fourth Conference on Chinese Studies

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