Calls for Papers/Jun 09, 2021

Special Issue of Religions: Unlocking Sacred Landscapes: Religious and Insular Identities in Context

Special Issue of Religions: Unlocking Sacred Landscapes: Religious and Insular Identities in Context lead image

Special Issue of Religions: Unlocking Sacred Landscapes: Religious and Insular Identities in Context

Special issue editors: Dr. Giorgos Papantoniou, Trinity College Dublin; Athanasios K. Vionis, University of Cyprus; and Christine E. Morris, Trinity College Dublin

‘Island archaeology’ emerged as a defined field during the 1970s, with many critiques and developments continuing to the present day. Historians and archaeologists have attempted to bring together issues of identities, insularities, and connectivities both in large and self-contained islands in terms of natural resources, but also in smaller island societies with limited resources. Within a wider field of rethinking the premises, agendas, and practices of island archaeology, an examination of how insularity has influenced the shape of historical events at a regional level and a focus on the domain of religion and its interaction with insularity remains a desideratum.

Inserting religion within a landscape perspective via an integrated approach, which carefully considers temporality, spatiality, and materiality, the Unlocking Sacred Landscapes Network invites historians and archaeologists to examine the function of religion in maintaining ‘social power’ (with the term including and considering both elite/official and non-elite/popular ideologies and cosmologies) in both large and smaller island societies.

This Special Issue will encompass various approaches both to ritual space and to artefacts relating to ritual practice and cult involving islandscapes (including landscapes and seascapes). The terms ritual and cult are used broadly to include sanctuaries, temples, and churches as well as the domestic and funerary spheres of life. We particularly welcome articles with a strong methodological and theoretical focus. Although the main focus of the Network is the Mediterranean region, we also warmly welcome relevant papers from colleagues working in other areas of the world, with a view to stimulating wider methodological dialogues and comparative approaches. The chronological range is also open, ranging from prehistory to the recent past and inclusive of ethnography, ethnoarchaeology, and cultural heritage studies.

In particular, we welcome contributions dealing with:

  • Historical and culturally driven perspectives that recognize the complexities of island religious systems as well as the active role of the islanders in constructing their own religious identities, irrespective of emulation and acculturation.
  • Inter-island and island/mainland relations, maritime connectivity of things and people, and ideological values in relation to religious change.
  • The relation between island space and environment in the performance and maintenance of spiritual lives.
  • The interrelation between official, popular, and personal identities, including ritual healing and magic in island societies.
  • Phenomenological, performative, and experiential analyses related to ritual space and/or its associated material assemblages in island societies.

Religions is an international, interdisciplinary, peer-reviewed, open access journal on religions and theology, published monthly online by MDPI.