Eastern Rite Catholic Churches occupy an ambiguous position between two
religious worlds and challenge the idea of a sharp religious and
political dichotomy between Eastern and Western Europe. After decades of
repression under socialism, the churches known popularly in Central
Europe as Greek Catholic have successfully undertaken a process of
revitalisation. This has been marked by competition with other churches,
both over material properties and over people's souls. How can a Greek
Catholic "identity" be recreated? Can these churches provide a
distinctive "product" for the new "religious marketplace"? By exploring
such questions the contributors to this volume shed fresh light on the
social and political shaping of religious phenomena in the era of
postsocialism and also on more general issues of belief, practice,
transmission and syncretism.