385 results on '"material religion"'
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2. How religious space is constituted by means of metaphors. The Buddhist Sīmā as a semiotic case study – with special consideration of the distinction between the urban and the wilderness.
- Author
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Krech, Volkhard
- Subjects
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SEMIOTICS , *RELIGION , *METONYMS , *BUDDHIST monasteries , *METAPHOR , *BUDDHISM - Abstract
The question of how religious space constitutes as a socio-cultural fact is explored by means of a case study on determining the boundary (sīmā) of a Buddhist monastery. Drawing on Peirce's semiotics, combined with system-theoretical considerations, it can be pointed out how a religiously determined space initially refers metaphorically to a physically qualified space in order to be understood metonymically, i.e., within a single domain and thus literally. Physically qualified space serves as a source domain that is mapped onto religious space as an unknown target domain in order to make the latter visible, tangible, and understandable. However, the oscillation between metonymy and metaphor remains and is mediated by symbols. In this way, the semiosis of religious space can develop further, as the varying relationship between civilization, wilderness, city, and monastery as well as additional regulations for the establishment of a sīmā show. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2025
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3. The business suit: transitional phenomena and religious comparison.
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Seales, Chad
- Abstract
This article invokes the analytical concept of transitional phenomena, as inspired by the psychoanalytical theories of Donald Winnicott, to develop a materialist model for comparing religion. Transitional phenomena are persons, places, or things that mediate material reality and discursive representation. The article focuses on the case study of the business suit at the 1893 World’s Parliament of Religions to show how the psychological duality of transitional phenomena in the creative construction of ‘me’ and ‘not-me’ is related to material and spatial distinctions in the discursive invention of ‘religion’ and ‘not-religion’. The goal of the issue is to show how the comparison of religion is not just a discursive problem of defining categories and classifying accordingly. Rather, it requires attending to the materialist connections between the categories of religious comparison and the social order of persons, places, and things that generate the possibility of comparison. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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4. Entropy and the Idea of God(s): A Philosophical Approach to Religion as a Complex Adaptive System.
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Fisher, Matthew Zaro
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CULTS , *PHILOSOPHY of religion , *UNCERTAINTY (Information theory) , *SYSTEMS theory , *RELIGIOUS experience - Abstract
While a universal definition of religion eludes the field of religious studies, it certainty seems that people are becoming differently religious rather than a-religious, especially since the latter half of the twentieth century. To explain the enduring relevance of religion in human experience, this article expands on recent evolutionary and sociological research in the systems theory of religion and develops a philosophical approach to understanding religion as a complex adaptive system. Frameworks of meaning and beliefs communicated by religious systems emerge and adapt in relation to interpretive selection pressures communicated by individuals-in-community relative to entropy's role in one's contingent experience as a "teleodynamic self" in the arrow of time. Religious systems serve an entropy-reducing function in the minds of individuals, philosophically speaking, because their sign and symbol systems communicate an "anentropic" dimension to meaning that prevents uncertainty ad infinitum (e.g., maximum Shannon entropy) concerning matters of existential concern for phenomenological systems, i.e., persons. Religious systems will continue to evolve, and new religious movements will spontaneously emerge, as individuals find new ways to communicate their intuition of this anentropic dimension of meaning in relation to their experience of contingency in the arrow of time. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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5. Seven Strands of the Serpent's Tail: Creativity and Cultural Improvisation in the Making of a Ritual Whip in Contemporary Taiwan.
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Reich, Aaron K.
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WHIPS , *RITUAL , *PUBLIC worship , *SYMBOLISM , *RITES & ceremonies - Abstract
Among the most ubiquitous ritual implements in modern Taiwan, the ritual whip functions to dispel demons and to summon spirit soldiers, the material embodiment of a fearsome serpent deity. Known as Saint Golden Whip, a standard ritual whip has a wooden handle carved in the likeness of a snake, a dragon, or a hybrid of the two, and a thong at least six feet in length, woven from straw rope. Despite the prevalence of these ritual whips, scholars have yet to examine the people involved in making them; the stories of these artists have largely been lost to history, their methods unrecorded and unknown. This article details as a case study the production of a single ritual whip, telling the stories of the carver who shapes its handle and the weaver who braids its tail. Both artists discover their own improvisations to navigate the space between invention and inheritance, highlighting how cultural traditions take on new forms and find new expressions, as these traditions move forward from person to person, from one generation to the next. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
6. Multifunctional Role of Tamil Material Catholicism: A Study on the Transnational celebrations of Our Lady of Vēlānkaṉṉi.
- Author
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Ponniah, James and Perry, Melissa Shamini
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SACRED space , *RELIGIOUS identity , *RELIGIOUS experience , *FILIAL piety , *CULTURAL identity , *DEVOTION , *PILGRIMS & pilgrimages - Abstract
This comparative study explores the significance of Catholic material religion of the Tamils in India and Malaysia in the celebration of Our Lady of Vēlānkaṉṉi feast which involves a complex interplay of materiality, religious beliefs, and embodied practices. Employing Plate and Bruland's understandings of material religion, and based on ethnographic study, this essay seeks to unravel the power of material objects and embodied practices to replicate sacred spaces in new locales and to deliver the pilgrims new experiences of religious sensibilities and personal fulfilment in the sphere of divine and human relations. The findings reveal that material religion functions as a tangible, religious and nostalgic link to the original shrine of Vēlānkaṉṉi and as a symbol of filial piety to the motherhood of Mary for the Tamil community in both sites. This paper highlights the role of material Catholicism in fostering Marian devotion and in shaping and displaying people's personal, religious and cultural identity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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7. The Miraculous Presence
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Hagen, Kaja Merete Haug and Hagen, Kaja Merete Haug
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- 2024
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8. When Death Falls Apart: Making and Unmaking the Necromaterial Traditions of Contemporary Japan
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Gould, Hannah, author and Gould, Hannah
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- 2023
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9. Fandom and the Cult of the Saints as Alternate Religious Networks: Fanzines and Books of Hours.
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Fleeson, Nathan E.
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CULTS ,ZINES ,CHRISTIAN saints ,RELIGIOUS communities ,FANS (Persons) ,RELIGIONS - Abstract
Many interpretations of fandom communities as religious focus on fandom in relation to the "world religions" and the institutional authority they carry. By way of contrast, the author aims to interpret fandom based on religious practice, primarily the Christian Cult of the Saints as a practice of religious devotion. The perspective of religious practice emphasizes that the communities that form as fandom often exist in tension with more traditional religious networks, similar to saint cults. To demonstrate this parallelism, the author explores community formation around saints and fantasy characters as serious play expressed in books of hours and fanzines. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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10. When a yarmulke Stands for All Jews: Navigating Shifting Signs from Synagogue to School in Luxembourg.
- Author
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Badder, Anastasia
- Subjects
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ATTITUDES toward religion , *PUBLIC sphere , *SYNAGOGUES , *JEWS , *RELIGIOUS adherents , *RELIGIOUS groups , *JEWISH way of life - Abstract
In the lives of students in Luxembourg's Liberal Jewish complementary school, flexibility and mobility are highly valued as key characteristics of modern living. Complementary school students feel they easily meet these criteria—they are multilingual, cosmopolitan, and their approach to Jewish life is flexible, and equally importantly, they look, dress, and comport themselves "like everyone else." These factors are understood to facilitate multiple movements and belongings in the contemporary world. The students directly contrast their ways of being with those of more observant Jews whom they refer to as "religious"; the material, embodied, and visible nature of observant Jewish life is perceived to be an impediment to participation and success in the secular sphere. However, when Jewishness appears in these students' secular school classrooms, it is most often represented by Orthodox-presenting men—often a man in a yarmulke. Further, these men and their yarmulkes are taken to represent all Jews, framed as a homogeneous group of religious adherents. For many complementary school students, these experiences can be jarring—they suddenly find themselves on the "wrong" side of the religious–secular divide and grouped together with those from whom they could not feel more distant. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork and a material approach to religion, this article argues that the yarmulke comes to point to different levels and modes of observance and identities and enable different possible belongings in the secular public sphere as it travels across contexts that include different definitions of and attitudes toward religion and Jewishness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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11. Introduction: The Flesh of Justice in Latin America.
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Bacigalupo, Ana Mariella, Manrique, Carlos A., and Mcallister, Carlota
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RELIGIOUS articles , *FREEDOM of religion , *RITES & ceremonies , *MARXIST philosophy - Abstract
The introduction to this special issue, "Subversive Religion and More-than-Human Materialities in Latin America," conceptualizes the transformative force of practices often gathered under the rubric of "popular religion," including Indigenous, Black, and campesino ritual as well as vernacular Catholicism and Pentecostalism. Rather than treating these practices as manifesting an essential alterity to either the modern state or the "West," we frame them as struggles to build a new world order both against and otherwise than frameworks. Exploring the materiality of these struggles across several dimensions—of the earth, of religious objects and rituals, and of the sovereign body—we describe the constitution of what we call the "flesh of justice" and probe its subversive effects. Drawing on the distinctive tradition of Latin American Marxism to contest the separation of the subaltern "otherwise" from the domain of modern politics, we offer two analytics for engaging with the flesh of justice in Latin America: subversive cosmopolitics and theopolitics. Resumen: La introducción a este número especial sobre "Religión subversiva y materialidades más-que-humanas en América Latina" conceptualiza la fuerza transformadora de prácticas muchas veces nombradas como "religión popular", incluyendo rituales indígenas, negros o campesinos, así como catolicismos o pentecostalismos vernáculos. En lugar de tratar estas prácticas como manifestaciones de una alteridad esencial frente al estado moderno o al "Occidente", las entendemos como luchas para construir un nuevo orden mundial en contra de y también de otro modo que esos marcos. Al explorar la materialidad de estas luchas en varias dimensiones—de la tierra, de los objetos y rituales religiosos, y del cuerpo del soberano—describimos la constitución de lo que llamamos la "carne de la justicia" e indagamos en sus efectos subversivos. Recurriendo a la tradición distintiva del marxismo latinoamericano para rechazar la segregación de la "otredad" subalterna de la política moderna, ofrecemos dos analíticas para aprofundizar en la carne de la justicia en América Latina: la cosmopolítica subversiva y la teopolítica. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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12. A Postcolonial and Material Theory of Knowledge for the Study of Religion: A Comparison of Durkheim and Chidester's Epistemologies
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Johan M. Strijdom
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Epistemologies ,comparison ,social theory ,postcolonial theory ,material religion ,Durkheim ,Chidester ,Philosophy. Psychology. Religion ,Religions. Mythology. Rationalism ,BL1-2790 - Abstract
This article addresses the fundamental question of how knowledge about religion is acquired in the academic study of religion. It does so by means of a comparison of the answers to the question by Emile Durkheim and David Chidester. Durkheim, in engaging with the conventional distinction between rationalist and empiricist theories of knowledge of his time, as well as their combination by Kant, argues that categories of thought (such as space, time, causality, number, and classifications) are not mere abstract conditions of understanding, but are to be conceptualized as constructs of particular societies. This social-anthropological shift in the theory of knowledge has been of decisive influence since the beginning of the 20th century, among others on the late 20th-century and beginning of the 21st-century South African scholar of religion, David Chidester. From a comparison of Durkheim's epistemology with that of Chidester it is, however, clear that the latter brings new insights to the epistemological question by insisting on a postcolonial and material approach to the study of religion. The comparison of the two episte-mologies that I provide here should give substance to this point by comparing ways in which they deal with a selection of categories and concepts in their study of religion.
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- 2024
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13. A INVISIBILIDADE DO RELIGIOSO NO "CRISTIANISMO DESCOLADO": COMENTÁRIOS AO TEXTO DE CRISTINA ROCHA.
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de Aguiar, Taylor
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CHRISTIAN life , *CHRISTIANITY , *INVISIBILITY , *EVERYDAY life , *RELIGIONS - Abstract
In this text, I propose a comment on the invisibility of the religious that permeates the idea of "cool Christianity", formulated in the central article of this issue by Cristina Rocha. This aspect, I suggest, contributes to the construction of an identity that goes beyond the notion of religion, associating itself with a Christianity that dispenses with it. To invest in this point, I reflect on questions that I have come across in my own research. I therefore divide the comment into two parts. In the first, I discuss the material dimension of "cool Christianity", as raised by Rocha in her dialogue with Birgit Meyer, and identify gaps that still exist in the methodological treatment of the topic; In the second part, I talk about another research topic, coaching, understanding that its conformation as a practice intertwined with "cool Christianity" in today's context raises the possibility of discussing the emergence of a non-religious Christianity. The focus of the argument is the articulations between the religious and the secular in "cool Christianity", where fashion and entertainment do not stop at a secular horizon, approaching the religious - that is, what we try to define when we talk about the daily life of Christians and Christianity. In this form, religion is transformed into a lifestyle, or into a Christian identity that does not appear to be subsidiary to the idea of religion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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14. Expocatólica 2023: um estudo sobre tendências ideológico-religiosas em materialidades católicas.
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Rodrigues de Souza, Patrícia
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RELIGIOUS articles , *CULTS , *NEGOTIATION , *RELIGIOUSNESS , *RELIGIONS - Abstract
This is a critical report about the visit to the catholic goods market Expocatolica 2023, which happens annually in São Paulo city. From Material Religion methods, the main goal was to map religious-ideological tendencies materialized in the trade of liturgic objects, as well as secular objects added of religious symbolisms. As secondary goals, I tried to observe negotiations between religion and new technologies, as well as, to what extent religiosities have been commoditized. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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15. Totem: The Ethics of a Material Term in the Study of Religion.
- Author
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Strijdom, Johannes
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POSTCOLONIAL analysis , *CRITICAL race theory , *RELIGIONS - Abstract
Although the term "totem" constituted a key term in classical theories of religion, it has not played a notable role in the recent material turn in the study of religion. This essay offers a critical reconsideration of the term by comparing its function in Durkheim's sociology of religion with David Chidester's postcolonial analysis of its function in religion and Religious Studies from a South African location. The comparison not only highlights problematic uses of the term in its history, but also sheds light on the question whether the term might be rehabilitated for use in the study of material religion. In assessing the term's genealogy as well as its possible use in the study of material religion, the ethical question is of paramount importance: informed by critical theories of race, class and gender, which values may serve in our assessment? [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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16. Materialization through Global Comparisons: the Findings at Ile-Ife from the Late 19th century to the 1960s.
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Bachmann, Judith
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MATERIALIZATION , *REPATRIATION , *COLONIZATION , *MYTHOLOGY - Abstract
The debate over repatriation has only recently come to European attention. Arguments against it still prevail and rely on the interpretation of the things involved as universally appreciated pieces of art or craft, which have to be stored accordingly. However, at least from the Nigerian context, many intellectuals see these objects as proof of their history before colonization. Thus, the objects represent the desire to be free of the ongoing negative impacts of colonization. The article argues that these debates cannot be properly understood if the materiality and weight that these objects acquired over time and in global exchanges is not considered. In light of material religion, new materialist and global religious history approaches, the article turns to an example, which has been forgotten in repatriation discussions: the findings at Ile-Ife from the late 19th century to the 1960s. Materialization, in this context, is an intra-active, politically charged, and comparative process. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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17. Spazio religioso, pacificazione del conflitto urbano e religiosità materiale a Bastogi Una ricerca etnografica.
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MARASCO, MARIO
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TRANSCENDENCE (Philosophy) ,HOUSING ,RELIGIOUS institutions ,CATHOLICS ,BROTHERLINESS ,PROTAGONISTS (Persons) in literature - Abstract
Copyright of Studi e Materiali di Storia delle Religioni is the property of Editrice Morcelliana S.p.A. and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
18. Written Remains: Materiality and the Religious Heritage Complex of the Jewish Portuguese Past.
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Isnart, Cyril
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RELIGIOUS articles , *CHARITABLE bequests , *STONE , *EXODUS, The , *TWENTIETH century , *RELIGIOUS thought , *SYNAGOGUES - Abstract
Hebraic written stones represent the primary surviving physical testimony to the Jewish past in Portugal, apart from a Medieval synagogue in the city of Tomar. As it is true for other religious objects, medieval Hebraic epigraphic stones have become a heritage asset, opening the way to specific recognition of the Jewish materiality of Portugal. Long after the forced conversion of Portuguese Jews to Catholicism or their exodus, a few epigraphic testimonials were collected, maintained, and displayed. A group of 20th century Jewish and non-Jewish amateur archaeologists and historians assembled manuscripts, books and stones and attempted to establish a museum in the medieval synagogue of Tomar. They dedicated themselves to the study and preservation of this written religious legacy and proposed to focus on the letter as the principal material heritage to represent the Portuguese Jewish past. Drawing on the concept of religious heritage complex, this article describes how letters, as material remains, lead to the cultural renewal of a religious minority's past. The study also sheds light on the cultural and religious consequences of this attention to letters on the heritage-making process itself. Through a combination of archival study, ethnographic fieldwork and comparison, the study sought to better understand the late destiny of the written remains of Judaism in Portugal. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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19. Introduction: Material Religion in Central and Eastern Europe.
- Author
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Szabó, Csaba
- Subjects
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MATERIALISM , *RELIGIOUS studies , *MINORITIES - Abstract
This introduction to the special issue "Material Religion in Central and Eastern Europe" provides an overview of various aspects of material religion in Central and Eastern Europe. It focuses on three major issues and their interconnectivity, which have played an important role in the social, political, and religious history of this macro-region: the much-debated notion of Central and Eastern Europe as a cultural and political region of the continent, the "glocal" aspects of material religion, and the role of material religion in the field of religious studies in this region. The article discusses the major topics and methodological approaches of the contributors of this special issue, highlighting the variety of research perspectives in religious studies in the post-communist regions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
- Full Text
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20. Consuming Rice Cakes, Sailing to Salvation: The Taiwanese Longhuapai Initiation Festival and the Question of Buddhist Orientations among Zhaijiao (Vegetarian Sects).
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Broy, Nikolas
- Subjects
RICE cakes ,BUDDHISTS ,RELIGIOUS groups ,SECTS ,FESTIVALS ,FOLK festivals ,VALUES (Ethics) ,CONFUCIANISM - Abstract
Copyright of Journal of Chinese Ritual, Theatre & Folklore / Mínsú Qǔyì is the property of Shih Ho-Cheng Folk Culture Foundation and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
21. Crystal Shops and Shopping for Crystals in Estonia: Materiality and Experience as Sources of Value.
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Teidearu, Tenno
- Subjects
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SHOPPING , *CRYSTALS , *MATERIAL culture , *CONTENT analysis , *THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
This article concentrates on crystal shops and shopping for crystals in Estonia. Consumption and commerce are inherent parts of New Spirituality. Crystals became the most salient commodities in esoteric shops during the 2010s, most of the shops having become "crystal shops" in Estonia. The aim of this article is to analyze the meaning-making potential of the materiality of crystals in shopping, and the material and sensuous aspects of crystal shops. From the perspective of material culture and consumption studies, this case study proposes that crystals are valuable in shopping primarily because of their materiality as a source of meaning and experience. In choosing crystals, people follow their material form and material qualities instead of a textual description of their supportive effects. Crystal shops are generally described as therapeutic places, however as an "experiencescape" they are strictly sensuous and material places. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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22. Constructing Mary through Pilgrimages: Lived Catholic Mariology in Poland.
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Niedźwiedź, Anna
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PILGRIMS & pilgrimages , *SHRINES , *RELIGIOUS experience , *MEDIATION , *POLARIZATION (Social sciences) , *RELIGIOUS communities , *CATHOLICS , *RITES & ceremonies - Abstract
This article presents selected aspects of Marian pilgrimages in the context of lived Catholicism in Poland. Lived Catholic Mariology is a concept introduced in this paper and discussed in terms of the intimate as well as communal relationships people establish with Mary through and in various rituals (e.g., pilgrimages), sites (e.g., shrines) and objects (e.g., images). Links between materializing Mary through images; affective, sensual and corporeal religious experiences; and community bonding are presented. They are discussed by drawing on approaches that refer to material religion, religion as mediation, concepts of sensational forms, and aesthetic formations. When examining the centrality of Marian images in Polish pilgrimage practices, this paper focuses on earlier developments, especially (1) those connected with the growth of Marian shrines during the Counter Reformation period and (2) the role played by traditional and innovative Marian pilgrimages during the Communist period in Poland (1945–1989). The final part of the paper refers to the recent changes connected with political polarization of Polish society, the process of radicalization through right-wing discourses that embrace Marian imagery and pilgrimages, the decline of Roman Catholicism and Catholic practices among Poles, and emerging alternative currents relating to Mary and pilgrimages in religious and secular contexts. Referring to various historical and current examples, this paper proposes seeing pilgrimages through the lived religion approach with a focus on materiality and mediatory dimension of religion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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23. (Techno)Paganism: An Exploration of Animistic Relations with the Digital.
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Dos Santos, Victoria
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PAGANISM , *ANIMISM , *RELIGIOUS experience , *COMPUTER engineering , *VIRTUAL reality , *OTHER (Philosophy) , *UNMARRIED couples , *ONTOLOGY , *INTIMATE partner violence - Abstract
The aim of this paper is to examine and illustrate how the animistic ontology present in neopaganism allows embodied and sensuous interactions with virtual worlds. By considering animism as a strategy with which to rethink human cohabitation with the techno-digital otherness, I will show how neopagans who use computer technology for spiritual purposes experience the online context as an environment where lived religious practices can occur. To do so, I will particularly focus on religious practices taking place in digital games and 3D social virtual platforms due to their ability to induce immersive and interactive experiences. Because neopaganism recognizes the material living world as a central aspect of spiritual experiences, I will explore the ways that the spatial and material dimensions are articulated in neopagan's online performances, the actions they make possible, and how they enable a more intimate relationship with virtual platforms. I will accompany the theoretical reflection with case studies and interviews with technopagan practitioners experiencing their religion with and within computer technology. This paper also aims to show how this new conception of animism connects to what Mikhail Bakhtin calls "dialogism", a condition that recognizes the multiplicity of perspectives and voices and denies the possibility of not getting involved with the otherness. For such reasons, approaching the digital through an animistic ontology can help us acknowledge the convergence of humans with the techno-digital otherness and explore, on deeper levels, sensuous and embodied experiences taking place in the religious context. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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24. Materiality and the Study of Indigenous Religions
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Whitehead, Amy R.
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- 2023
- Full Text
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25. Religious practices and church space in modern Russia / Религиозные практики и храмовое пространство в современной России
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Dmitriy Antonov / Дмитрий Игоревич Антонов
- Subjects
религиозные практики ,реликвии ,вотивы ,церковное пространство ,материальная религия ,religious practices ,relics ,ex-voto ,church space ,material religion ,Practical Theology ,BV1-5099 - Abstract
The article discusses current trends in the formation of the church space in post-Soviet Russia. The author focuses on religious practices that result in the presence of symbolically significant objects – relics, votive gifts, donators’ icons, notes, etc., – in churches. These objects build the space of the church as a space of communication with the saints; they form an environment in which parishioners and pilgrims clearly see the channels and means of this communication. Some practices are carried out primarily by the clergy – such as collections of relics and brandea or ordering various reliquaries for keeping sacred objects which the church is either already having or planning to obtain. Collecting relics allows clergy to build the “topography of holiness” in the church, to present the uniqueness of the church in the parish and on the church website. Other practices are carried out primarily by parishioners and pilgrims – this is the bringing of votive gifts, notes, and donators’ icons (sometimes with inscriptions). Various objects that appear in the temple space can serve as affordances for such actions. First, these are wooden icon-cases covered with glass – ‘niches’ in which it is convenient and safe to place gifts. Secondly, these are ‘regular’ gifts – decorations placed on icons by the clergy (as a rule, pectoral crosses and panagia). Finally, the same role is played by the notes, the gifts, and the curatorial icons themselves – the presence of the gift serves as an invitation to do a similar action and bring a note / a jewelry or to order a new icon related to personal or family story (request, need). As a result of such practices, the church space in Russia is actively developing. Reliquaries of various forms are being created; relics are integrated into icons and crosses, turning them into reliquaries; massive icon-cases are ordered for icons, convenient for placing a lot of votive gifts, etc. These processes are sometimes hardly noticeable, but their role in the current church tradition is undoubtedly significant. В статье рассмотрены актуальные тенденции в формировании храмового пространства в постсоветской России. В фокусе внимания – религиозные практики, которые оказывают влияние на наполнение церквей символически значимыми объектами – реликвиями, вотивными дарами, ктиторскими иконами, записками и т. п. Эти предметы выстраивают пространство храма как пространство коммуникации со святыми и формируют среду, в которой прихожане и паломники наглядно видят каналы и средства этой коммуникации. Некоторые практики осуществляются прежде всего духовенством – это собирание реликвий, святых мощей и брандеа, заказ различных реликвариев для хранения как уже приобретённых, так и (зачастую) ещё только запланированных к приобретению святынь. Собирание реликвий позволяет выстраивать свою «топографию святости» в каждой церкви, позиционировать уникальность своего храма в приходе и на церковном сайте. Другие практики осуществляют прежде всего прихожане и паломники – это принесение вотивных даров, записок, а также ктиторских икон, иногда с донаторскими надписями. Аффордансами для таких действий могут служить различные предметы, появляющиеся в храмовом пространстве. Прежде всего, это деревянные киоты, закрытые стеклами, – ниши, в которых удобно и безопасно размещать дары. Кроме того, это «регулярные» дары – украшения, размещаемые на иконах духовенством (как правило, наперсные кресты и панагии). Наконец, ту же роль играют сами записки, привесы и ктиторские иконы – наличие дара служит приглашением сделать аналогичное действие и принести записку / одарить икону драгоценностью / заказать новую икону, связанную с личной или семейной историей (просьбой, потребностью). В результате развития таких практик храмовое пространство в России активно развивается, трансформируется, формируется на новых основаниях. Для реликвий создают мощевики разных форм; частицы мощей интегрируют в иконы и кресты, превращая их в реликварии; для икон заказывают массивные киоты, в которых можно разместить множество вотивных привесов и т. п. Эти процессы порой мало заметны, но их роль в актуальной церковной традиции крайне велика.
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- 2023
- Full Text
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26. Between Veneration and Destruction: The Venus of St. Matthias
- Author
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Martin Radermacher
- Subjects
museum ,Venus ,Trier ,material religion ,iconism ,anti-iconism ,Religion (General) ,BL1-50 - Abstract
This article discusses the so-called “Venus of St. Matthias,” a former Roman statue of the goddess Venus that has, throughout its history, been embedded in diverse contexts of use. It has been venerated, criticized, rejected, and (almost) destroyed until it found its way into a museum where it is kept to this day. Outlining some of the central stages of this history, the paper intends to illustrate and discuss some of the various types of anti-iconism as outlined in the introduction to this special issue. The object serves as a promising case to elaborate on the possible relations of religion and images and is a good example to explain the heterogenous constellations of iconic and anti-iconic attitudes towards specific objects. The Venus of St. Matthias has been entangled with both iconic and anti-iconic discourse, thus producing a narrative that is inextricably linked with its material substance.
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- 2023
- Full Text
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27. The Africanization of Catholicism in Ghana: From Inculturation to Pentecostalization.
- Author
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Niedźwiedź, Anna
- Subjects
- *
PENTECOSTAL churches , *CATHOLIC identity , *CULTURAL property , *SPIRITUALITY , *MATERIAL culture , *ADINKRA symbols , *CATHOLICS ,VATICAN Council (2nd : 1962-1965) - Abstract
This article discusses the Africanization of Catholicism in Ghana as a process that embraces activities deriving from the inculturation doctrine as well as those emerging during the most recent process of pentecostalization. The complex and changing historical and current discourses on "African tradition", "traditional religion", and "African spirituality" are presented in relation to the creation of an independent Ghana and the state-instigated concept of "national heritage", as well as the Catholic theological developments strongly shaped by the Second Vatican Council. The influences of Pentecostal and charismatic Churches are described and the pentecostalization of Catholicism is interpreted as a kind of subversive development of inculturation doctrine and practices. The article refers to the material and embodied aspects of religion, pointing to the importance of material culture and "embodied continuation" in shaping contemporary African Christian and African Catholic identities. The article draws on ethnographic material collected in Catholic parishes in central Ghana. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Portraiture of Guru Nanak, the founder of Sikhism: colonial transformation and the social role.
- Author
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Ikeda, Atsushi
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL role , *SIKHISM , *SIKHS , *GURUS , *SIKH temples , *MIDDLE class , *SOCIAL cohesion - Abstract
Today, single portraits representing Guru Nanak are very popular among the Sikhs and are frequently hung on the walls of houses and temples. It is during the Singh Sabha Movement from the 1870s that portraits of Guru Nanak came to be hung on the walls of Sikhs' temple and house by the urban middle class. Wall-hung portraits of Guru Nanak symbolises the uniqueness of Sikhism and, since they were painted both in a unique three-quarter face and in a Hindu-like frontal, Guru Nanak portraiture has played a pivotal role in social cohesion among the Sikhs who belonged to different factions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. AN ICON'S JOURNEY FROM KYIV TO THE PACIFIC: RUSSIAN COLONIAL WARS AND ORTHODOX PIETY IN THE EARLY 20TH CENTURY.
- Author
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PAULAU, Stanislau
- Subjects
WAR ,TWENTIETH century ,PIETY ,THEOLOGY - Abstract
The article highlights the importance of material objects and practices of mobility for understanding the complex relationships between Christianity and war. It thus explores the potential of material-oriented research for studying the sacralization of military violence, focusing on Russian Orthodox contextual theology of war and using the Russo-Japanese War (1904-5) as a case study. Special attention is given to the icon known as "the Mother of God of Port Arthur", which is analyzed as an embodiment, a material manifestation, of the Russian Orthodox theology of war. The text is divided into four sections, (1) introducing the concept of Orthodox contextual theologies of war, (2) outlining the Russian colonial expansion project to the Pacific, (3) examining key features of Russian Orthodox theology of war in connection to the supposedly "miraculous appearance" and the mobility of the "Icon of the Mother of God of Port Arthur", and (4) summarizing the findings and their relevance for understanding recent developments in Russian Orthodoxy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. From a 'good death' to a 'calm heart': Buddhist retailing meets self-care in contemporary Japan.
- Author
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Gould, Hannah
- Subjects
- *
BUDDHISTS , *SECULARISM , *SPIRITUALITY - Abstract
This article explores how vendors of Buddhist goods, which are traditionally associated with death and funerary rites in Japan, have responded to religious decline by venturing into alternative spirituality, wellness, and home décor markets. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork within Buddhist goods stores, I examine how retailers and artisans have begun re-orientating their business models and product lines from caring for the dead at acute moments of spiritual transition to caring for the living in their everyday conditions of loneliness and stress. By pushing products that generate affects of healing (iyashi) and a calm heart (kokoro), these actors forge a new corporate–spiritual philosophy and religious consumer subjectivity and, in so doing, seek to defend their market share and social relevance in an age of secularism, disconnection, and precarity. However, for commercial actors, the space between religion and spirituality can be surprisingly treacherous and this transition challenges their skills of 'affective retailing'. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Making Informal Sacred Geographies: Spiritual Presence, Sensual Engagement, and Wayside Shrines in Urban India.
- Author
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Rao, Ursula
- Subjects
SHRINES ,CITIES & towns ,SACREDNESS ,GEOGRAPHY ,RITES & ceremonies - Abstract
Inspired by recent debates in material religion, and using the example of the central Indian city of Bhopal, this article characterizes an informal Hindu religious geography that flourishes in the interstices of India's planned urbanity. The small wayside shrines that dot Indian cities usually arise spontaneously, created by believers who discern divine manifestations and begin to worship these. Traces of ritual activities animate others to follow suit and express their devotion, thus reinforcing the sites' sacredness. The daily repetition of myriad minor ritual gestures maintains a dynamic religious geography, which in a recursive mode ties together devotees in an anonymous ritual community, whose members share a visual language and are inclined to take seriously the desire of deities to live among humans. With a focus on minor religion, and by concentrating on the social life of a cosmos of informal shrines, the text highlights a less-studied dimension of urban religion. It draws attention to the cumulative effect of lived practices and human–material entanglements, and complements discussions that frequently engage with omnipresent politics of formalization as well as competition of communities for attention and recognition in multireligious spaces. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. MAVCOR Journal
- Subjects
material religion ,visual culture ,material culture ,religion ,art ,Religions. Mythology. Rationalism ,BL1-2790 ,Visual arts ,N1-9211 - Published
- 2023
33. Heritigization and foreign diplomacy
- Author
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Gunilla Gunner and Carola Nordbäck
- Subjects
Heritage studies ,Church history ,St. Catherine's Church ,Material religion ,Swedish foreign diplomacy ,Philosophy. Psychology. Religion ,Religions. Mythology. Rationalism ,BL1-2790 ,Religion (General) ,BL1-50 - Abstract
The article investigates the complex negotiation process regarding the renovation of St Catherine’s church in St Petersburg. Additionally, the goal is to gain novel understanding of how former religious spaces can be transformed and highlight the various significances these structures may possess in different contexts, particularly at the junction of religion and cultural heritage. Built in 1865, the church served as a place of worship for the Swedish-speaking congregation for nearly eighty years before being repurposed as a sports school. Recently, Sweden has aimed to restore the church and utilize it as a centre for Swedish–Russian relations. The article examines the reasons and arguments for renovation, as well as the progress that has been made to date. Additionally, it explores the role of Sweden in Russia through the perspectives of various stakeholders, including members of the congregation, diplomats, politicians, architects and priests.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Spinoza: Arch-Father of the Material-Religion Approach
- Author
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Tamimi Arab, Pooyan and Tamimi Arab, Pooyan
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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35. Introduction: What Is a Religious Form?
- Author
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Tamimi Arab, Pooyan and Tamimi Arab, Pooyan
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Crafting
- Author
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Gould, Hannah, author
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. The Stuff of Death and the Death of Stuff
- Author
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Gould, Hannah, author
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. The ambiguous role of materiality in transitions to Orthodox Christianity in contemporary Finland.
- Author
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Kupari, Helena
- Subjects
- *
ORTHODOX Christianity , *CATHOLIC liturgy , *IDEOLOGY , *LUTHERAN Church , *CONVERSION (Religion) - Abstract
According to the basic starting point of the study of material religion, religion is an inextricably material phenomenon. In theorizations of religious conversion, however, materiality is accorded little attention. This article presents a case study that investigates the role of materiality in individual religious change, as well as highlighting the dematerialized underpinnings of modern Western conceptualizations of conversion. It concerns transitions from Lutheranism to Orthodox Christianity in contemporary Finland. In this context, the sensory aspects of liturgical life are often identified as a central pull-factor of Orthodoxy. Nevertheless, partiality towards Orthodox aesthetics is not always considered a proper reason for switching churches. The article analyses interview material gathered from converts and is informed by the concept of semiotic ideology, which it applies to examine the different and sometimes conflicting assumptions regarding material expressions as mediators between humanity and divinity present in the data. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. The museum is like a temple: the Fo Guang Shan Buddha Museum in Taiwan1.
- Author
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Wang, Shu-Li and Gamberi, Valentina
- Subjects
- *
ARCHIPELAGOES , *IDEOLOGY , *EXTRATERRESTRIAL beings , *TEMPLES , *ETHNOLOGY research , *MUSEUMS , *BUDDHISTS - Abstract
This article describes how a museum built by the Taiwanese Fo Guang Shan (FGS), one of the largest Buddhist groups on the island, triggers emotions and spirituality in its visitors. We explore how the conceptualization of materiality by the founder of FGS, Hsing Yun, is presented to visitors at the FGS Buddha Museum (FGS-BM) and how Humanistic Buddhism is materially expressed at the museum. By analysing the museum space and investigating visitors' responses to the FGS-BM through ethnographic research, we describe how the FGS uses material artefacts, museum space and embodied activities to communicate Buddhist ideology to the laity, triggering some visitors' emotions and leading some to describe the museum as being similar to a temple. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. The museum is like a temple: the Fo Guang Shan Buddha Museum in Taiwan1.
- Author
-
Wang, Shu-Li and Gamberi, Valentina
- Subjects
ARCHIPELAGOES ,IDEOLOGY ,EXTRATERRESTRIAL beings ,TEMPLES ,ETHNOLOGY research ,MUSEUMS ,BUDDHISTS - Abstract
This article describes how a museum built by the Taiwanese Fo Guang Shan (FGS), one of the largest Buddhist groups on the island, triggers emotions and spirituality in its visitors. We explore how the conceptualization of materiality by the founder of FGS, Hsing Yun, is presented to visitors at the FGS Buddha Museum (FGS-BM) and how Humanistic Buddhism is materially expressed at the museum. By analysing the museum space and investigating visitors' responses to the FGS-BM through ethnographic research, we describe how the FGS uses material artefacts, museum space and embodied activities to communicate Buddhist ideology to the laity, triggering some visitors' emotions and leading some to describe the museum as being similar to a temple. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Fetish Again? Southern Perspectives on the Material Approach to the Study of Religion
- Author
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Appiah Simon Kofi
- Subjects
africa ,fetish ,material religion ,positionality ,southern ,subaltern ,Religion (General) ,BL1-50 - Abstract
The material turn in the study of religion\s has opened new methodological vistas, rejuvenating the notion of fetish. Scholars in Africa must acknowledge and share in the successes of the material approach. At the same time, they cannot help but recall that in colonial Africa the notion of fetish was, par excellence, the mirror of primitive religion and the denigration of Africans in the missionary enterprise. Fetish was not only the medium for the fall of African religions and the enforcement of colonial authority, but also and especially, the genesis of the theory of primitive religion\s. This paradox looms large when the material turn is re-read from southern perspectives as a call for a radical intra-cultural critique of the epistemological positions and subalternity of knowledge production in Africa.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Exhibitions and Displays of Religious Art
- Author
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Gahtan, Maia Wellington
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Kuntowijoyo Prophetic Social Science And Its Relevance To Material Religion.
- Author
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Maulana, Abdullah Muslich Rizal, Sufratman, and Aliah, Ainun
- Subjects
- *
ISLAM , *SCIENCE , *ISLAMIZATION , *SOCIAL sciences , *RELIGION , *MATERIAL culture - Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Preserving Offerings, Prolonging Merit: Efficacy, Skillful Means, and Re-purposing in Plastic Buddhist Material Culture in Contemporary Sikkim.
- Author
-
HOLMES-TAGCHUNGDARPA, AMY
- Subjects
- *
MATERIAL culture , *PLASTICS & the environment , *POLLUTION , *BUDDHISTS , *ANTHROPOLOGISTS - Abstract
Despite official bans, public criticism and concern over pollution, plastics are widely used in Buddhist material culture in the Indian Himalayan state of Sikkim. Using the framework of the seven bowls of water offerings, undertaken every morning to the Buddhas and deities in domestic shrine rooms, and ethnographic observations, as a way to frame discussions of changing material culture, I will interrogate how plastics are used and waste is re-purposed in Sikkimese interdimensional engagements in offerings to the deities and spirits. I will argue that plastics continue to be seen as efficacious and generative for Buddhist communities due to their ability to be repurposed and recycled, acting as exemplars of skillful means that allow for Buddhist communities to exercise their own agency in determining the efficacy of material culture and the making of new futures. This paper engages with scholarship from anthropologists and Buddhist studies scholars on Buddhist materiality, plastic, and waste studies to consider the malleability of plastics, even when they are not malleable, and demonstrate how this malleability generates positive and creative engagements across dimensions that allow for nuanced and complex responses to the anxieties people have about plastic waste in the Himalayas. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Bringing the Inert to Life: The Activation of Animate Beings.
- Author
-
VanPool, Christine S. and VanPool, Todd L.
- Subjects
- *
SHAMANISM , *LIFE cycles (Biology) , *RITES & ceremonies , *HUMAN beings , *WORLD culture , *SOCIAL interaction - Abstract
Animist cultures around the world are based on interactions among humans and other-than-human beings. Humans are active agents in this process and often establish alliances with other-than-human beings to accomplish a variety of goals. The means of establishing these alliances is an emerging area of interest in studies of animist ontologies. We demonstrate here that these allies are often object-persons specifically made or modified by humans to have desired spiritual and physical properties. Examples of common object-persons range from domestic residences to shamanic drums to sacred bundles used for ritual activities. We further establish that object-persons go through a life cycle typically starting with a process that activates and modifies latent agency. We demonstrate this process using case studies from the North American Southwest, especially during the Medio period (AD 1200 to 1450) occupation of the Casas Grandes region of northwestern Mexico and the southwestern United States. Our primary examples are the creation of three Mesoamerican-style ballcourts and a water reservoir at Paquimé, which is the ceremonial and political center of the Medio period world. These examples reflect the underlying animistic ontology of this culture and provide a case study of the relationship between material religion and ritual practice that frames animistic religious practices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Lithic devotionality and other aesthetic strata: Buddhist garden shrines in rural Java.
- Author
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Rizzo, Roberto
- Subjects
- *
SHRINES , *BUDDHISTS , *AESTHETICS , *GARDENS , *BUDDHISM , *BLENDED learning - Abstract
In this article I explore the contemporary practice of establishing garden shrines in Buddhist rural Java. While on the surface the placement of shrines follows the demands of environmental upgrading and beautification strategies, often in accord with eco-tourist imaginaries, the practice reveals a complex aggregation of material and discursive threads. The article situates the project, ethnographically, as a sensorial practice in which environmental awareness and a sense of "atmosphere" are directly involved. This perceptual domain, particularly the relationship of the villagers to the Sakyamuni statuettes, is simultaneously articulated in continuity with the religious field of Javanese Buddhism, as it encompasses notions of sacralization and rituality. I recover the idea of aesthetic practice in order to bring these sensorial stems on a common platform. In blending discursive and materialist approaches, the article converses with the idea of strata as devised by Deleuze and Guattari as a pivotal image in their work on rhizomes. Through the concept of stratification, I argue, it is possible to apprehend Buddhist shrines as cultural formations in which "everything is involved," that is, as multiplicities in which layers of materiality and discourse are intertwined in meaningful and generative ways. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Ernährungskommunikation aus Perspektive der Vergleichenden Religionswissenschaft
- Author
-
Radermacher, Martin, Godemann, Jasmin, editor, and Bartelmeß, Tina, editor
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Comparing Practices
- Author
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Innes, Jr, William C., Martin, Eloisa, Series Editor, and Innes, Jr, William C.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Power, Habitus, and Material Practice (1970–Present)
- Author
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Innes, Jr, William C., Martin, Eloisa, Series Editor, and Innes, Jr, William C.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Introduction
- Author
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Innes, Jr, William C., Martin, Eloisa, Series Editor, and Innes, Jr, William C.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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