The Virgin Mary continues to attract devotees to her images and shrines. In Moved by Mary, anthropologists, geographers and historians explore how people and groups around the world identify and join with Mary in their struggle against social injustice, and how others mobilize Mary to impose ideas and rules and legitimize acts of violence and suppression. Far from an outdated practice of little relevance to the modern world, Marian pilgrimage expresses the deep and urgent concerns of a wide range of people. With examples of Marian pilgrimages in Europe, America, South America, the Middle East,…mehr
The Virgin Mary continues to attract devotees to her images and shrines. In Moved by Mary, anthropologists, geographers and historians explore how people and groups around the world identify and join with Mary in their struggle against social injustice, and how others mobilize Mary to impose ideas and rules and legitimize acts of violence and suppression. Far from an outdated practice of little relevance to the modern world, Marian pilgrimage expresses the deep and urgent concerns of a wide range of people. With examples of Marian pilgrimages in Europe, America, South America, the Middle East, Asia and the Pacific, Moved by Mary explores the ways in which men and women of different ages and religious, political, social-economic and ethnic backgrounds empower themselves to deal with modern-day issues with Mary¿s help. The ethnographic cases reveal the cultural and devotional variation of Marian pilgrimage, but also global similarities. Collectively, the contributors to Moved by Mary show how in many places religion dramatically suffuses everyday life.
Anna-Karina Hermkens has a background in theoretical archaeology and cultural anthropology. She obtained her PhD in 2005 with a study on material culture and gender in Papua New Guinea (2005). Articles on this topic were published amongst others in: Shadows of New-Guinea, Arts from the Great Island of Oceania in the Barbier-Mueller Collections (2007); the Journal of Pacific History (2007) and Visual Anthropology (2007). Hermkens is currently working as a project-coordinator and researcher in the program 'The Power of Marian Pilgrimage'. This has resulted in several articles, amongst others in: Anthropology Today (2007), Culture and Religion (2007) and Oceania (2008). In cooperation with Willy Jansen and Catrien Notermans, she organized the international conference on "The Power of Marian pilgrimage" in Nijmegen (Netherlands) from 1-3 February 2007 (http://www.ru.nl/igs/powerofpilgrimage).
Inhaltsangabe
Contents: Introduction: the power of Marian pilgrimage Anna-Karina Hermkens Willy Jansen and Catrien Notermans; Part I Negotiating Power Through Mary's Imagery: Mary on the margins? The modulation of Marian imagery in place memory and performance Simon Coleman; Marian images and religious identities in the Middle East Willy Jansen; Aura and the inversion of Marian pilgrimage: Fatima and her statues David Morgan. Part II Marian Pilgrimages and Political Religious and Economic Struggles: Mary's journeys through the warscape of Bougainville Anna-Karina Hermkens; Mary in Poland: a Polish master symbol Cathelijne de Busser and Anna Niedzwiedz; Mary mother of all: finding faith at the sacred source of Sendangsono Indonesia Ien Courtens; Religious materialization of neoliberal politics at the pilgrim site of the Virgin at Urkupiña in Bolivia Sanne Derks. Part III Marian Pilgrimage and Family Relations: Connecting the living and the dead: re-membering the family through Marian devotion Catrien Notermans; Caring for others: Mary death and the feminization of religion in Portugal Lena Gemzöe; Family pilgrimages to the sea in Guadeloupe: matrifocality under pressure Janine Klungel. Part IV Lived Religion in the Context of the Official Church: Paradoxes of Marian apparitional contestation: networks ideology gender and the Lady of all nations Peter Jan Margry; Legitimization or suppression? The effects of Mary's appearances at Knock Ireland Edith Turner; Abundant history: Marian apparitions as alternative modernity Robert Orsi; Epilogue: the many faces of Mary Jill Dubisch; Bibliography; Index.
Contents: Introduction: the power of Marian pilgrimage Anna-Karina Hermkens Willy Jansen and Catrien Notermans; Part I Negotiating Power Through Mary's Imagery: Mary on the margins? The modulation of Marian imagery in place memory and performance Simon Coleman; Marian images and religious identities in the Middle East Willy Jansen; Aura and the inversion of Marian pilgrimage: Fatima and her statues David Morgan. Part II Marian Pilgrimages and Political Religious and Economic Struggles: Mary's journeys through the warscape of Bougainville Anna-Karina Hermkens; Mary in Poland: a Polish master symbol Cathelijne de Busser and Anna Niedzwiedz; Mary mother of all: finding faith at the sacred source of Sendangsono Indonesia Ien Courtens; Religious materialization of neoliberal politics at the pilgrim site of the Virgin at Urkupiña in Bolivia Sanne Derks. Part III Marian Pilgrimage and Family Relations: Connecting the living and the dead: re-membering the family through Marian devotion Catrien Notermans; Caring for others: Mary death and the feminization of religion in Portugal Lena Gemzöe; Family pilgrimages to the sea in Guadeloupe: matrifocality under pressure Janine Klungel. Part IV Lived Religion in the Context of the Official Church: Paradoxes of Marian apparitional contestation: networks ideology gender and the Lady of all nations Peter Jan Margry; Legitimization or suppression? The effects of Mary's appearances at Knock Ireland Edith Turner; Abundant history: Marian apparitions as alternative modernity Robert Orsi; Epilogue: the many faces of Mary Jill Dubisch; Bibliography; Index.
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