Keeping up with the Moravians: Heritage-Making of Three Protestant Communities and their Eighteenth-Century Settlements

Publikation: Bog/antologi/afhandling/rapportPh.d.-afhandlingForskning

Standard

Keeping up with the Moravians : Heritage-Making of Three Protestant Communities and their Eighteenth-Century Settlements. / Poulsen, Rasmus Rask.

University of Copenhagen, 2023. 232 s.

Publikation: Bog/antologi/afhandling/rapportPh.d.-afhandlingForskning

Harvard

Poulsen, RR 2023, Keeping up with the Moravians: Heritage-Making of Three Protestant Communities and their Eighteenth-Century Settlements. University of Copenhagen.

APA

Poulsen, R. R. (2023). Keeping up with the Moravians: Heritage-Making of Three Protestant Communities and their Eighteenth-Century Settlements. University of Copenhagen.

Vancouver

Poulsen RR. Keeping up with the Moravians: Heritage-Making of Three Protestant Communities and their Eighteenth-Century Settlements. University of Copenhagen, 2023. 232 s.

Author

Poulsen, Rasmus Rask. / Keeping up with the Moravians : Heritage-Making of Three Protestant Communities and their Eighteenth-Century Settlements. University of Copenhagen, 2023. 232 s.

Bibtex

@phdthesis{4139fe6a3df24bd1a45ad3571906f9f6,
title = "Keeping up with the Moravians: Heritage-Making of Three Protestant Communities and their Eighteenth-Century Settlements",
abstract = "In 2015, Christiansfeld, an eighteenth century town in Southern Denmark, was enlisted as UNESCO World Heritage. This thesis examines how the Moravian Brethren, a small Protestant community in Christiansfeld, negotiate and interpret their historic site, practices and objects in the midst of heritage-making processes in Christiansfeld. The thesis further draws on contemporary perspectives from the Moravian Brethren congregations in Herrnhut, Saxony, and Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, which similarly to Christiansfeld are Protestant colonies built by and for Moravian Brethren in the eighteenth century. Sites and congregations that wanted to join Christiansfeld on the World Heritage List.Based on analytical concepts and theories from Critical Heritage Studies, especially studies of religious cultural heritage, I examine ethnographic findings from long-term fieldwork in Christians-feld and shorter stays in Herrnhut and Bethlehem. In the thesis, I explore the valorization, use and negotiation of Moravian sites, traditions and objects, as both religious and cultural heritage. How do these Moravian congregations manage their treasured religious values, as something they have inher-ited and want to look after, while simultaneously sharing them with the world? I examine this question based on the daily religious life of the three congregations in their sites.In doing so, I show how Moravians in Christiansfeld continuously interpret themselves as a “living congregation” and heirs to particular religious values they have been entrusted. Heirship constitutes a particular relationship with the site of Christiansfeld that the Moravian congregation seeks to keep, preserve and protect. Faced with the influence of external stakeholders who share Christiansfeld as UNESCO World Heritage, I show how Moravians negotiate their claims, responsibilities and practices in a continuous dilemma of keeping-while-sharing their religious heritage.The thesis contributes to the existing research and studies of religious cultural heritage with its ethnographic perspectives on local forms of cultural heritage-making between religious and secular heritage stakeholders. Analytically, the thesis contributes, in particular, by its focus on local religious actors as heirs. The analytical concept of heirs, I argue, holds analytical potency in ethnographic studies of religious cultural heritage.",
author = "Poulsen, {Rasmus Rask}",
note = "Supervisors: Tine Damsholt and Marianne Holm Pedersen Public defence: Time: 3 Nov. 2023 Assessment Committee Associate professor Anne Folke Henningsen, Chair (University of Copenhagen) Associate professor Mads Daugbjerg (Aarhus University) Senior Researcher Cristina S{\'a}nchez-Carretero (Spanish National Research Council)",
year = "2023",
language = "English",
publisher = "University of Copenhagen",

}

RIS

TY - BOOK

T1 - Keeping up with the Moravians

T2 - Heritage-Making of Three Protestant Communities and their Eighteenth-Century Settlements

AU - Poulsen, Rasmus Rask

N1 - Supervisors: Tine Damsholt and Marianne Holm Pedersen Public defence: Time: 3 Nov. 2023 Assessment Committee Associate professor Anne Folke Henningsen, Chair (University of Copenhagen) Associate professor Mads Daugbjerg (Aarhus University) Senior Researcher Cristina Sánchez-Carretero (Spanish National Research Council)

PY - 2023

Y1 - 2023

N2 - In 2015, Christiansfeld, an eighteenth century town in Southern Denmark, was enlisted as UNESCO World Heritage. This thesis examines how the Moravian Brethren, a small Protestant community in Christiansfeld, negotiate and interpret their historic site, practices and objects in the midst of heritage-making processes in Christiansfeld. The thesis further draws on contemporary perspectives from the Moravian Brethren congregations in Herrnhut, Saxony, and Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, which similarly to Christiansfeld are Protestant colonies built by and for Moravian Brethren in the eighteenth century. Sites and congregations that wanted to join Christiansfeld on the World Heritage List.Based on analytical concepts and theories from Critical Heritage Studies, especially studies of religious cultural heritage, I examine ethnographic findings from long-term fieldwork in Christians-feld and shorter stays in Herrnhut and Bethlehem. In the thesis, I explore the valorization, use and negotiation of Moravian sites, traditions and objects, as both religious and cultural heritage. How do these Moravian congregations manage their treasured religious values, as something they have inher-ited and want to look after, while simultaneously sharing them with the world? I examine this question based on the daily religious life of the three congregations in their sites.In doing so, I show how Moravians in Christiansfeld continuously interpret themselves as a “living congregation” and heirs to particular religious values they have been entrusted. Heirship constitutes a particular relationship with the site of Christiansfeld that the Moravian congregation seeks to keep, preserve and protect. Faced with the influence of external stakeholders who share Christiansfeld as UNESCO World Heritage, I show how Moravians negotiate their claims, responsibilities and practices in a continuous dilemma of keeping-while-sharing their religious heritage.The thesis contributes to the existing research and studies of religious cultural heritage with its ethnographic perspectives on local forms of cultural heritage-making between religious and secular heritage stakeholders. Analytically, the thesis contributes, in particular, by its focus on local religious actors as heirs. The analytical concept of heirs, I argue, holds analytical potency in ethnographic studies of religious cultural heritage.

AB - In 2015, Christiansfeld, an eighteenth century town in Southern Denmark, was enlisted as UNESCO World Heritage. This thesis examines how the Moravian Brethren, a small Protestant community in Christiansfeld, negotiate and interpret their historic site, practices and objects in the midst of heritage-making processes in Christiansfeld. The thesis further draws on contemporary perspectives from the Moravian Brethren congregations in Herrnhut, Saxony, and Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, which similarly to Christiansfeld are Protestant colonies built by and for Moravian Brethren in the eighteenth century. Sites and congregations that wanted to join Christiansfeld on the World Heritage List.Based on analytical concepts and theories from Critical Heritage Studies, especially studies of religious cultural heritage, I examine ethnographic findings from long-term fieldwork in Christians-feld and shorter stays in Herrnhut and Bethlehem. In the thesis, I explore the valorization, use and negotiation of Moravian sites, traditions and objects, as both religious and cultural heritage. How do these Moravian congregations manage their treasured religious values, as something they have inher-ited and want to look after, while simultaneously sharing them with the world? I examine this question based on the daily religious life of the three congregations in their sites.In doing so, I show how Moravians in Christiansfeld continuously interpret themselves as a “living congregation” and heirs to particular religious values they have been entrusted. Heirship constitutes a particular relationship with the site of Christiansfeld that the Moravian congregation seeks to keep, preserve and protect. Faced with the influence of external stakeholders who share Christiansfeld as UNESCO World Heritage, I show how Moravians negotiate their claims, responsibilities and practices in a continuous dilemma of keeping-while-sharing their religious heritage.The thesis contributes to the existing research and studies of religious cultural heritage with its ethnographic perspectives on local forms of cultural heritage-making between religious and secular heritage stakeholders. Analytically, the thesis contributes, in particular, by its focus on local religious actors as heirs. The analytical concept of heirs, I argue, holds analytical potency in ethnographic studies of religious cultural heritage.

M3 - Ph.D. thesis

BT - Keeping up with the Moravians

PB - University of Copenhagen

ER -

ID: 374129129