Possessed by the Virgin: Hinduism, Roman Catholicism, and Marian Possession in South India
Autor Kristin C. Bloomeren Limba Engleză Hardback – 4 ian 2018
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780190615093
ISBN-10: 0190615095
Pagini: 348
Dimensiuni: 236 x 157 x 28 mm
Greutate: 0.64 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0190615095
Pagini: 348
Dimensiuni: 236 x 157 x 28 mm
Greutate: 0.64 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
The study is a remarkable piece of work because it gives deep insights into hidden but highly popular religious practices that flourish in the borderland between local forms of Catholicism and Hinduism ... Possessed by the Virgin is highly recommended for readers with a general interest in the religious landscape of India and equally for scholars specialized in the Tamil sphere.
Bloomer's Possessed by the Virgin is an enlightening, powerful, and touching account of Marian possession in Tamil Nadu. It accomplishes the rare task of accounting for the complexity of this phenomenon, while maintaining a remarkable analytical clarity. The book also points to new promising avenues of inquiry.
Bloomer's book is a compelling account of religious plurality and gendered agency in an India that is increasingly under the stifling stranglehold of Hindu nationalism. In this, its attention to the minutiae of the lives of women who claim to be possessed by the Virgin Mary allows the book to tell a story about everyday inhabitations of religion that critique and subvert hegemonic forms, creating sites of potential in local contexts, even as they do not enact wide-ranging structural transformations.
I know of no book remotely like Kristin Bloomer's Possessed by the Virgin. It reads like a powerful, beautifully written novel; the people are so real, you cannot wait to find out what happens to them. But the same detail that brings the characters to lifeparticularly but not only the Indian women who are possessed by Maryis also what gives the book its solid authenticity as a great work of scholarship, a path-breaking study of villagers and city-dwellers who live passionately in two religions, Marian Catholicism and Tamil Hinduism. Bloomer captures in rich historical, anthropological, and richly literary detail the tragedy of Dalit (Untouchable) life and the astonishing power of religion to heal.
From the borrowed bodies of three Tamil women, the Virgin Mary acts and speaks. Tracing the effects of possession practices as they defy and perpetuate social, political, and religious norms, Bloomer also carefully attends to each woman's struggles and victories in ways that respectfully humanize. Sophisticated and moving, accessibly written with stunning detail, this book is a scholarly achievement that is very hard to put down.
Bloomer's descriptive virtuosity graces the work, and surpasses that of many other excellent ethnographies in its uncommon sympathy, even tenderness, for those she describes. With the novelist's ability to evoke, and the poet's ability to do so economically, Bloomer's storytelling is so powerful and poignant that the reader sometimes realizes only after reflection what a profound contribution Possessed by the Virgin has made to ongoing scholarly discussions of gender, hegemony, selfhood, and agency.
Written with Tamil-inspired linguistic metaphor, Bloomer sets a standard for rigorous and ethically sound ethnographic work and offers the field not just important stories of women's lives but a reimagining of the ways religiosity functions in the modern world.
Bloomer's Possessed by the Virgin is an enlightening, powerful, and touching account of Marian possession in Tamil Nadu. It accomplishes the rare task of accounting for the complexity of this phenomenon, while maintaining a remarkable analytical clarity. The book also points to new promising avenues of inquiry.
Bloomer's book is a compelling account of religious plurality and gendered agency in an India that is increasingly under the stifling stranglehold of Hindu nationalism. In this, its attention to the minutiae of the lives of women who claim to be possessed by the Virgin Mary allows the book to tell a story about everyday inhabitations of religion that critique and subvert hegemonic forms, creating sites of potential in local contexts, even as they do not enact wide-ranging structural transformations.
I know of no book remotely like Kristin Bloomer's Possessed by the Virgin. It reads like a powerful, beautifully written novel; the people are so real, you cannot wait to find out what happens to them. But the same detail that brings the characters to lifeparticularly but not only the Indian women who are possessed by Maryis also what gives the book its solid authenticity as a great work of scholarship, a path-breaking study of villagers and city-dwellers who live passionately in two religions, Marian Catholicism and Tamil Hinduism. Bloomer captures in rich historical, anthropological, and richly literary detail the tragedy of Dalit (Untouchable) life and the astonishing power of religion to heal.
From the borrowed bodies of three Tamil women, the Virgin Mary acts and speaks. Tracing the effects of possession practices as they defy and perpetuate social, political, and religious norms, Bloomer also carefully attends to each woman's struggles and victories in ways that respectfully humanize. Sophisticated and moving, accessibly written with stunning detail, this book is a scholarly achievement that is very hard to put down.
Bloomer's descriptive virtuosity graces the work, and surpasses that of many other excellent ethnographies in its uncommon sympathy, even tenderness, for those she describes. With the novelist's ability to evoke, and the poet's ability to do so economically, Bloomer's storytelling is so powerful and poignant that the reader sometimes realizes only after reflection what a profound contribution Possessed by the Virgin has made to ongoing scholarly discussions of gender, hegemony, selfhood, and agency.
Written with Tamil-inspired linguistic metaphor, Bloomer sets a standard for rigorous and ethically sound ethnographic work and offers the field not just important stories of women's lives but a reimagining of the ways religiosity functions in the modern world.
Notă biografică
Kristin C. Bloomer is Associate Professor of Religion at Carleton College in Northfield, Minnesota.