Practising Ecumenism Through Boundary Work and Meta-Coding
Practising Ecumenism Through Boundary Work and Meta-Coding
Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork on religion in Zambia, this article engages critically with approaches that suggest that ecumenism necessarily occurs across socio-religious boundaries. I argue that the objective of ecumenism - namely, good-willed co-operation between religious practitioners who are otherwise separated from each other in terms of their institutional affiliations - can also be attained through boundary work and use of the meta-codes 'non-Christian - Christian' and 'Christian -"real" Christian'. I contend that using these meta-codes in the logic of what has been called 'fractal recursion' allows people to stress situationally the existence of commonalities between religious practitioners and/or religious groupings that, at other points in time, are perceived to be different from each other. In this way, the shifting of categorical boundaries produces ecumenical reality effects.
CITATION: Kirsch, Thomas G.. Practising Ecumenism Through Boundary Work and Meta-Coding . Oxon : Taylor & Francis Group , 2018. Journal of Southern African Studies, Vol. 44, No. 2, Apr. 2018, pp. 345-359 - Available at: https://library.au.int/practising-ecumenism-through-boundary-work-and-meta-coding