Sex, Death and Witchcraft: A Contemporary Pagan Festival
Autor Douglas Ezzyen Limba Engleză Paperback – 21 mai 2014
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781472527585
ISBN-10: 1472527585
Pagini: 216
Ilustrații: 12 bw illus
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 13 mm
Greutate: 0.34 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1472527585
Pagini: 216
Ilustrații: 12 bw illus
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 13 mm
Greutate: 0.34 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
Evocative descriptions of a controversial contemporary Pagan ritual in Australia
Notă biografică
Douglas Ezzy is Associate Professor of Sociology at the University of Tasmania, Australia.
Cuprins
1. Introduction2. Soul3. Ritual4. Death: The Underworld Rite 5. Shadow6. The Baphomet Rite7. Ethics8. Religion9. Conclusion
Recenzii
Douglas Ezzy offers an intriguing and rich ethnographic study of rituals that confront sex and death in a Contemporary Pagan temporary community setting. In the first in-depth study of its kind, he discusses and analyzes these important yet contentious themes in Pagan ritual in a respectful manner that provides much insight into the practitioners' mindsets. It is exciting to see a scholar of Ezzy's calibre grapple with these difficult issues.
Douglas Ezzy offers us a potent brew of embodiment, performance, liminality, sexuality, myth-making, and much more. His clear analysis should inspire us to think again about ritual and religion from relational perspectives.
Sociologist Ezzy takes readers inside the pagan subculture, showing how even short-lived festivals and gatherings exert a powerful force over practitioners. The book is an in-depth study of a controversial pagan festival in Australia, Faunalia, which ran for nine years beginning in 2000. The organizers reconstructed rituals with dark and contested pasts, particularly the erotic Baphomet rite, where participants celebrate a devil-like hermaphroditic deity by entering trance states and dancing around a bonfire naked. In the "Underworld" rite, participants role-play their own deaths. Ezzy's sympathetic account of these events is retold through participants' eyes rather than through his own firsthand observation, though he is a pagan and has participated in the festival. He argues that these emotionally intense rituals add "soul" to participants' lives, allowing them to transcend ordinary reality for a brief time and get in touch with their "true selves." Ezzy finds that participants report resolutions of internal conflicts and a new sense of self-worth, even years after taking part in these rituals. Summing Up: Recommended. Upperdivision undergraduate students and above.
Sociologist Douglas Ezzy takes us to Australia in his new book about a pagan festival called by the pseudonym Faunalia [.]For a few people for a little while at least, Faunalia appears to give purpose and transform consciousness; it would be interesting to know how long that purpose and transformation endure and what those individuals seek next.
Douglas Ezzy offers us a potent brew of embodiment, performance, liminality, sexuality, myth-making, and much more. His clear analysis should inspire us to think again about ritual and religion from relational perspectives.
Sociologist Ezzy takes readers inside the pagan subculture, showing how even short-lived festivals and gatherings exert a powerful force over practitioners. The book is an in-depth study of a controversial pagan festival in Australia, Faunalia, which ran for nine years beginning in 2000. The organizers reconstructed rituals with dark and contested pasts, particularly the erotic Baphomet rite, where participants celebrate a devil-like hermaphroditic deity by entering trance states and dancing around a bonfire naked. In the "Underworld" rite, participants role-play their own deaths. Ezzy's sympathetic account of these events is retold through participants' eyes rather than through his own firsthand observation, though he is a pagan and has participated in the festival. He argues that these emotionally intense rituals add "soul" to participants' lives, allowing them to transcend ordinary reality for a brief time and get in touch with their "true selves." Ezzy finds that participants report resolutions of internal conflicts and a new sense of self-worth, even years after taking part in these rituals. Summing Up: Recommended. Upperdivision undergraduate students and above.
Sociologist Douglas Ezzy takes us to Australia in his new book about a pagan festival called by the pseudonym Faunalia [.]For a few people for a little while at least, Faunalia appears to give purpose and transform consciousness; it would be interesting to know how long that purpose and transformation endure and what those individuals seek next.