Winters, Joseph RCarter, J KameronBielousova, Grazina2022-06-152022-06-152022https://hdl.handle.net/10161/25294<p>This dissertation argues that the emergence of the idea of Eastern Europe in the Enlightenment and post-Enlightenment West could be attributed not only to geopolitical causes but also to the way that the region was figured religiously. Considered against the backdrop of the rise of global racial order, the idea of Eastern Europe is shown to have its origins in Western theological imaginaries which were transmuted into gendered raciality. Through an analysis of the travelogues by Western travelers to the Russian Empire and its European peripheries, this project traces the rise of Euro-Orientalism, which gets inflected as “Asiatic” in Russia, and “Jewish” in the rest of Eastern Europe. Seen through this Euro-Orientalist lens, Russia is figured as the intra-European antithesis to the West, and the remainder of Eastern Europe, as liminal territories. </p>ReligionEast European studiesRussian historyColonialismEastern EuropeHistory of TravelReligious DifferenceRussian EmpireThe Making of Savage Europe: Religious Difference and The Idea of Eastern EuropeDissertation