Spirit Possession in Brazil: the Perception of the (Possessed) Body Author(S): Bettina E

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Spirit Possession in Brazil: the Perception of the (Possessed) Body Author(S): Bettina E Spirit Possession in Brazil: The Perception of the (Possessed) Body Author(s): Bettina E. Schmidt Source: Anthropos , 2014, Bd. 109, H. 1. (2014), pp. 135-147 Published by: Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft mbH Stable URL: https://www.jstor.org/stable/43861689 JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected]. Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at https://about.jstor.org/terms Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft mbH is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Anthropos This content downloaded from 212.219.61.210 on Wed, 25 Aug 2021 08:07:52 UTC All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms ANTHROPOS 109.2014: 135-147 Spirit Possession in Brazil The Perception of the (Possessed) Body Bettina E. Schmidt Abstract. - Spirit possession is the core religious practice inIntroduction most Afro- American religions. It is usually described as "mount- ing"; the spirit "rides" the body of the devotee as a horseman Concepts such as spirits, souls, gods, or demons "cut rides a horse. The description projects the image that a spirit takes control over the body of the medium and "uses" the hu-against the grain of our natural expectations about man medium; the body of the person is passive and submissive, how things work in the real world" (Tremlin 2006: while the spirit is active and dominant. However, this view does 87). Things are usually described as "real" when not reflect the highly elaborate discourse about spirit possession we can touch and measure them, when they have a in Brazil. The article is based on fieldwork among communities of Afro-Brazilian and Spiritist traditions in São Paulo, Brazil. physical quality or at least when we can repeatedly Based on subjective narratives about bodily experience and thetest them in a laboratory. But there is "something" academic debate about body and mind, the article contributes in possession that escapes our understanding, as van to a wider understanding of the possession experience. [ Brazil de , Port states (2005: 152). Gods, spirits, souls, reli- spirit possession, trance, candomblé, umbanda, spiritism, body gion in general, are products of cognition. While it concept, mediumship J is possible to describe the phenomenon of posses- Bettina E. Schmidt, Dr. habil., University of Wales Trinity sion,St and even to classify such experiences accord- David; M. A. in cultural anthropology (Marburg 1989); PhD with ing to their function, etc., it seems difficult to go a thesis about ethnicity and religion in Puerto Rico (Marburg beyond the indigenous understanding of it (see Cra- 1995); habilitation with a monograph about Caribbean religions panzano 2005: 8687). Anthropologists have collect- in New York City (Marburg 2001). - Her academic interests in- clude the anthropology of religion, diaspora identity, religious ed numerous accounts of local explanations from experience, urban studies, medical anthropology, and gender is-all over the world, and many have argued for the sues. - Her main fieldworks were conducted in Mexico, Puerto validity of these perceptions (e.g., title of a book Rico, Ecuador, New York City, and, more recently, in São Paulo, chapter "It Is Not for Us to Judge", in Klass 2003, Brazil. - She has published extensively on Caribbean and Lat- derived from Lewis 2003). This attitude, however, in American religions, identity, cultural theories and migration and is, e.g., co-editor of "Spirit Possession and Trance. New In- must not be confused with antiscientific mysticism. terdisciplinary Perspectives" (London 2010). - See also Refer- Pyysiäinen makes an important point when he states ences Cited. that "whether a given explanation is valid should be judged on the basis of evidence and logical coher- ence of the argument, not on the basis of a religious [or anti-religious] agenda" (2008: 3). However, ac- "The whole problem is not quite the phenomenon; cording to Crapanzano (2005: 8693) possession it is the way we look at the phenomenon" confirms "the belief in the spirits" - but that which (José Jorge de Morais Zacharias, interview on is based only on belief is not regarded as scientif- April 15, 2010). ic evidence. On the other side, from the believer's point of view, religious knowledge "cannot be con- This content downloaded from 212.219.61.210 on Wed, 25 Aug 2021 08:07:52 UTC All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms 136 Bettina E. Schmidt sidered representational fore presenting excerpts from my interviews with or theoretical": the devo- tees argue narratives that about the perception oftheir the bodily dimen- knowledge about God or any other supernatural sion of possession experiences from an indigenous being "does not depend on our capacities forperspective. The second knowing, part will discuss the narra- but on God's own self-rev- elation" (Pyysiäinen tives in dialogue with the different areas of scholarly 2003: 229 f.). It seems that the gap between debate. The aimthe is to show how eachposition of the perspec- of the devotees and the po- sition of the tives can contribute scholars to our understanding of the pos- are insuperable. This article session experience. considers the discourse about pos- session among mediums in Brazil, that is, the un- derstanding of the experience among people expe- riencing the Trance, Possession,so-called and Mediumship in Brazil spirit possession. The analysis will be based on subjective narratives collected via open-ended Ethnographic interviewsContext in São Paulo, Brazil. Since I want to explore the indigenous, in this case Brazil- ian possession In the 2010 census, religions 64.6 percent of Brazilians adepts' view of the physical dimension claimed of to belong to thethe Roman Catholic Church,possession experience, the focus of this article but with a declining tendency will over the last three dec- be on the perception of bodily transformation. ades. A growing number of Brazilians I belongwill to one report, for instance, how peo- ple from different of the numerous Evangelical Churches (22.2 per- religious traditions responded when asked cent in 2010 withabout a rising tendency). In sum, nearlytheir feelings during the expe- rience; whether 90 percent of Brazilians claim to belongthere to a Chris- is a difference depending on the approaching tian Church. The remaining 10 percent entity; are spread and whether they remem- ber physical between Spiritists changes. (2 percent), adherents to an Afro- The article will also deal with the complex Brazilian religion (0.3issue percent), agnostics or atheists of how to include the ideas of devotees that (8 percent), and members have of another religion, such a possession experience inside an academic as Judaism, Islam,discourse Hinduism, or Buddhism.1 These without falling into non-ac- ademic, religiously numbers, however, do not represent all practitioners motivated and unscientific ex- planations. of Spiritist or Afro-Brazilian religions since many In my research, however, I did not follow the people avoid being identified with an Afro-Brazil- path that many anthropologists working on Afro- ian tradition, despite the fact that the religions have Brazilian religions have taken; I did not attempt been legalised. Chesnut estimates that half of all to experience the incorporation myself. Although Brazilians have visited an Umbanda centre at least I was often told that it is impossible to describe it, once, usually during a personal crisis and that 15- and that I need to experience it, I decided to main- 20 percent of Brazilians (app. 30 million) practise tain my scholarly distance and remain a participant Umbanda or one of the other Afro-Brazilian reli- observer instead of an observing participant. Since gions regularly (2003: 106 f.). Especially Umbanda it is very common for anthropologists studying re- has the image of being a provider of physical and ligions to "go native" and initiate into a religious spiritual healing services, which leads to the estima- community, this decision puts me in opposition to tion that many more Brazilians attend regularly Um- many colleagues (see also Capone 2010). Despite banda rituals without considering themselves to be my fascination for the deities that emerged during members of the religion (Engler 2009b: 556). my research among adherents of Afro-Caribbean re- Experiences with extra-sensual and extra-motor- ligions (Schmidt 2008), which are very similar to ic phenomena go therefore much further than the the deities in Afro-Brazilian religions, I could not statistics in the national census suggest and Brazil- overcome my reluctance to commit myself to the ian culture and society can be characterised by an religious obligations. Consequently, my research enormous openness towards so-called paranormal has to rely exclusively on narratives collected from experiences and a willingness to speak about them practitioners in Brazil. I can include my own expe- (Machado 2009: 17 f.). Although this characterisa- riences only as an observer who attended numerous tion cannot be substantiated by national data, only rituals. I have no evidence to prove the accurateness by a small survey of students in São Paulo, it is re- of these subjective narratives about a phenomenon that is in the end ineffable. 1 The national census of 2010 can be accessed via the website The article is divided into two sections, one eth- of the Instituto Brasileiro de Geografia e Estatística (Brazil- nographic and another analytical. I will start with a ian Institute for Geography and Statistics): <http://www. brief introduction into the ethnographic context be- sidra.ibge.gov.br > [24.08.2012]. Anthropos 109.2014 This content downloaded from 212.219.61.210 on Wed, 25 Aug 2021 08:07:52 UTC All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms Spirit Possession in Brazil 137 markable that 82.7 to percent most rituals.
Recommended publications
  • The History Spiritualism
    THE HISTORY of SPIRITUALISM by ARTHUR CONAN DOYLE, M.D., LL.D. former President d'Honneur de la Fédération Spirite Internationale, President of the London Spiritualist Alliance, and President of the British College of Psychic Science Volume One With Seven Plates PSYCHIC PRESS LTD First edition 1926 To SIR OLIVER LODGE, M.S. A great leader both in physical and in psychic science In token of respect This work is dedicated PREFACE This work has grown from small disconnected chapters into a narrative which covers in a way the whole history of the Spiritualistic movement. This genesis needs some little explanation. I had written certain studies with no particular ulterior object save to gain myself, and to pass on to others, a clear view of what seemed to me to be important episodes in the modern spiritual development of the human race. These included the chapters on Swedenborg, on Irving, on A. J. Davis, on the Hydesville incident, on the history of the Fox sisters, on the Eddys and on the life of D. D. Home. These were all done before it was suggested to my mind that I had already gone some distance in doing a fuller history of the Spiritualistic movement than had hitherto seen the light - a history which would have the advantage of being written from the inside and with intimate personal knowledge of those factors which are characteristic of this modern development. It is indeed curious that this movement, which many of us regard as the most important in the history of the world since the Christ episode, has never had a historian from those who were within it, and who had large personal experience of its development.
    [Show full text]
  • Spiritism, Violence, and Social Struggle in Late Nineteenth-Century Catalonia
    Spiritism, Violence, and Social Struggle in Late Nineteenth-Century Catalonia Gerard Horta University of Barcelona ABSTRACT This article discusses different situations concerning the position- ing of the nineteenth-century Catalan spiritism towards violence: on the one hand, with regard to capitalist's society's implementa- tion of the industrial process; on the other, in relation to the politi- cal use of violence – ‘terror tactics’ – employed by certain anar- chist sectors in Catalonia at the close of the century. As we shall see, an understanding of said positioning reveals the spiritist move- ment's ambiguity in this sphere. To interpret this ambiguity, one must take into account the tremendous crossroads at which its fol- lowers found themselves, midway between one society being destruc- tured and another that, in statu nascendi, was being prestructured. INTRODUCTION Catalan spiritism is first mentioned in the correspondence that José Maria Fernández Colavida established in 1858 with Léon Denizard Rivail also known as Allan Kardec (1804–1869), the Lyon-born French educator who systemized European spiritist theory and practice in 1857. Spiritism was firmly ingrained in Catalonia from the 1860s to 1939 at the end of the Spanish Civil War, the outcome of which triggered brutal repression against the movement's asso- ciations and followers. Throughout that period, broad subordinate sectors – in general, workers and artisans – devised a world's view, the organization of social relations and the development of people that embraced all spheres of existence. The presence of certain members of financial means made possible the earliest translations to Spanish, clandestine editions and the diffusion of Kardec's works, for example The Spirits' Book (Kardec 1963) (for an over- Social Evolution & History, Vol.
    [Show full text]
  • Volume 1, Pages 80-164
    THE AUSTIN FAMILIES REGISTER THE SEPTEMBER 2006 NEWSLETTER OF THE Austin Families Genealogical Society AN INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATION OF AUSTIN FAMILY RESEARCHERS CANADIAN & U.S. COUSINS DISCOVER EACH OTHER IN FORT WAYNE 2006 INTERNATIONAL AUSTIN CONVENTION Carol R. Austin, 9726 Mirage Circle Garden Grove, CA 92844. Carol’s e-mail address is [email protected]. AFGS Genealogist Pat Austin brought her thick yellow folder on the William and Ruth Austin line of Virginia AFGS Photo 81 and North Carolina to this year’s convention. It held the Cousins continuing discussions even after data collected in the 19 years since the Society’s initial convention! Top photo (facing camera, left to right): publication of this line on Austins of America PAGE 232 Linda Austin, Pat Whalon & Jackie Austin. Bottom photo: Howard Austin, Janet Austin, Marilyn Rawls in AUGUST 1987. Her compilation of names and & Pat Whalon. addresses of those researching this line was of special interest to several attendees: Marilyn Rawls of Ontario, VOLUME 2 INDEXING VOLUNTEERS Jackie and Linda Austin of Alabama, Janet and Howard Austin of Arkansas, Pat and Rodney Whalon of Indiana. Thanks to the convention attendees who volunteered to help index Austins of America - Volume 2: Cheryl Austin With Pat’s help these cousins discovered each other, and Akusis, Donald Edroy Austin, Carol Robinson Austin, became so enthused comparing notes and swapping Kathleen Cree Koble and Marilyn Louise Rawls. stories on their line that they continued their discussions long after the convention had ended (see photographs at 2007 CONVENTION SITE SELECTION right)! See PAGE 82 for more on this year’s convention AFGS members have nominated two sites for the 2007 and attendees.
    [Show full text]
  • Mediumship: Study and Practice Program 2
    Mediumship: Study and Practice Program 2 1 Federação Espírita Brasileira Mediumship: Study and Practice Program 2 Organized by: Marta Antunes Moura Translated by: SUMMARY 2 3 Mediumship: Study and Practice - Program 2 Introduction Further to the launch of the Program I: Mediumship Course: Study and Practice, we present to the Spiritist Movement the Program II which completes the doctrinal content planned for the formation of mediumship workers in the Spiritist House. In this program, the study and practical activities have become more compressed and focused on Mediumistic practice, expected to be developed within six months, including the complementary activities, considered optional. The weekly meetings remain up to two hours, and the presentation of each theoretical theme is at maximum between 30-40 minutes, reserving the remaining time (1 hour and 30/20 minutes) to the Mediumistic exercise, developed in the form of a supervised Mediumistic meeting. Upon completion of the course, if the course coordination understands that participants need more time for Mediumistic practice, they may extend the supervised Mediumistic practice to one or two semesters, in accordance with the existing possibilities. Another possibility, always keeping consistency with the existing conditions in the Spiritist institution, is to direct participants who effectively demonstrate spiritual conditions to join a Mediumistic group, assuming their commitment to the work of mediumship. Participants should be aware that the completion of the course does not guarantee them referral to a Mediumistic group, considering that the Mediumistic experience demands of each one, not only doctrinal knowledge itself, but the persevering effort of moral improvement, dedication, attendance and mental health.
    [Show full text]
  • This Item Is the Archived Peer-Reviewed Author-Version Of
    This item is the archived peer-reviewed author-version of: Hypnosis in Spain (1888-1905) : from spectacle to medical treatment of mediumship Reference: Graus Andrea.- Hypnosis in Spain (1888-1905) : from spectacle to medical treatment of mediumship Studies in history and philosophy of science: part C: studies in history and philosophy of biological and biomedical sciences - ISSN 1369-8486 - 48:December(2014), p. 85-93 Full text (Publishers DOI): http://dx.doi.org/doi:10.1016/j.shpsc.2014.07.002 Institutional repository IRUA This article has been published in Studies in History and Philosophy of Science, Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences, 2014, volume 48, pp. 85-93, as part of the special issue edited by Andreas Sommer: Psychical research in the history and philosophy of science. Note: this represents a pre-print version. It differs from the published version in formatting, pagination, and small grammatical corrections. This material is intended for purposes of education, research, scholarly communication, or critical commentary, all in conformity with “fair use” and the established practice of authors’ providing single preprints and offprints for non-commercial use. Any other use is unauthorized and may violate copyright. Hypnosis in Spain (1888-1905): From spectacle to medical treatment of mediumship. a Andrea Graus Abstract Towards the end of the nineteenth century, some Spanish physicians sought to legitimize hypnotherapy within medicine. At the same time, hypnotism was being popularized among the Spanish population through stage hypnosis shows. In order to extend the use of medical hypnotherapy, some physicians made efforts to demarcate the therapeutic use of hypnotic suggestion from its application for recreational purposes, as performed by stage hypnotists.
    [Show full text]
  • BUSS Newsletter 61
    www.buss.org.uk www.facebook.com/uk.buss [email protected] / [email protected] Newsletter 61 Published: March 2018 A Message from Dr Bezerra de Menezes (Spirit) Submitted by Janet Duncan, Allan Kardec Study Group (ASKG) Fraternal friends and devoted workers in the field of the Teachings of Jesus! We embrace you in the name of the workers from this side of life and pray to our Master and Friend for blessings and peace for all. The new times occurring on the physical plane are announcing an era of transformations that are necessary for the implementation of the process of human evolution. The two planes of life are uniting and bonds of solidarity are becoming closer, having in view previously foretold events. In accordance with the commitments set in place by the planet’s Mentors, selfless souls work incessantly defining responsibilities and tasks to be performed at specific moments. However, not far away in the world of spirit, in regions of purgatorial suffering indicated by the aspect of the inhabitants, souls are stirring, moving, producing noise and clamour in the hope of benefiting in some way from the programme determined by the Higher Spheres. Being disturbed, they are fearful of the changes they have already been told about, not knowing as yet how to manage their emotions and desires. Therefore, they go to the public squares and temples of different religious interpretations to discuss and express their views. At times accepting the winds of change and at other times rebelling, positioning themselves against them. In this process, they influence incarnate spirits who listen to their vacillating opinions, while they, in turn, are often influenced by the reactions of those who are incarnated.
    [Show full text]
  • Spiritual Emergency - the E L C Transpersonal Path to I T R Understanding and Supporting a Psychospiritual Crisis Catherine G Lucas
    6 Net work Review Winter 2011 s Spiritual Emergency - the e l c Transpersonal Path to i t r Understanding and Supporting a Psychospiritual Crisis Catherine G Lucas Following on from the previous article, this paper explores varieties of spiritual emergency as a process of profound psychospiritual transformation. “I’ll be talking about myself! I’ll probably go mad after giving person can be held and supported through these extreme this paper.” 1 This refrain went round and round in his head. experiences, and partly because our society tends to The paper was on the ‘Importance of the Unconscious in interpret psychological crisis as illness, failing to recognise Psychopathology’. The year was 1914. World War I was about the spiritual dimension. It was precisely because Jung feared to break out. Carl Jung was preparing to give a lecture in the response of those in his field and beyond, that he was Aberdeen, Scotland, invited by the British Medical wary of publishing his Red Book . Association. That Jung contributed so much to the field of Over the next few years, as Europe descended into the transpersonal psychology 3 and to our understanding of the madness of war, Jung did indeed plunge into inner chaos. deeply transformative process of spiritual emergency, is Although he never lost touch with day to day reality, his hold undoubtedly because he went through the process himself. on it was at times tenuous. It was only carrying on working He tells us that all his subsequent work, in effect his life’s and the knowledge that he had a wife and five children, that accomplishment, stems from that period, from that he lived at 228 Seestrasse in Küsnacht, which assured him ‘numinous beginning’.
    [Show full text]
  • An Ethnography of Reading in a Spiritist Study Group
    1 Horiz.antropol. vol.1 no.se Porto Alegre 2006 An ethnography of reading in a spiritist study group Bernardo Lewgoy Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul – Brazil ABSTRACT As a religion, Kardecism confers fundamental importance to the study of its own body of literature, understood as the complement to religious revelation. Based upon ethnographic research in a traditional middle-class Kardecist centre in Porto Alegre, this article examines some ways through which the Kardecists, structured in small groups, interact with this written tradition. The group is fundamental in forming a spiritist identity for two reasons: firstly, it delimits internal alliances, whether or not these are translated into differences in doctrinal views. Secondly, it is one of the spaces in which the spiritist orator is formed by learning to make use of formulas extracted from a specific repertoire. Inspired by the discussions on orality and literacy and by the recent proposal for an ethnography of reading (Boyarin 1993), I aim to show that, if the spiritist speech is constructed as orality supported by texts, there are also very important informal dimensions to be considered which contextualize and actualize these group’s relation with sacred texts. Keywords: ethnography of reading, literacy, oral communication, spiritism. As a highly literate religion, Kardecist spiritism confers a special status – alongside charity and its ritual practices – to the reading and interpretation of its own particular religious bibliography, beginning with the ‘Third Revelation’ or ‘Codification’ of Allan Kardec, a text that functions as a source for defining religious authority and identities.1 Becoming socialized into spiritism means learning, studying and discussing in depth its canonical authors and works; in other words, entering a universe of debate and reflection dominated by a written and literate religious tradition, permeated by a ‘secondary orality’ – in Ong’s sense (1982).
    [Show full text]
  • Spiritual) Consequences
    Suicide Translated by S. Mc Alonan 2010 Richard Simonetti Suicide ALL YOU NEED TO KNOW (Causes & Consequences) Translated by S. Mc Alonan 2010 Copyright © 2018 by BRITISH UNION OF SPIRITIST SOCIETIES - BUSS All rights of reproduction, copy, communication to the public and economic use of this work are retained exclusively by BUSS – London/UK. No part of this publication may be reproduced, sorted on a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, microfilm, Internet usage, CD-ROM, DVD recording or otherwise, without prior permission from the copyright owner and the publisher of this book under the terms of law which regulates the connected copyrights. ISBN 978-0-9564493-2-0 Translated by S. Mc Alonan Introduction by Brian O’Callaghan Cover design and layout by Rones José Silvano Lima Edition of BRITISH UNION OF SPIRITIST SOCIETIES - BUSS London, England UK Charity No. 1136512 [email protected] www.buss.org.uk Copyright the original Portuguese: 2006 By Centro Espírita Amor e Caridade Bauru SP / Brazil INTERNATIONAL DATA FOR CATALOGING IN PUBLICATION (ICP) Simonetti, Richard. Suicide All You Need To Know; Richard Simonetti, Bauru, Sp, Brazil, translation by S. Mc Alonan. – Londres, United Kingdom: BUSS, 2018. 176 p. ; 21 cm ISBN 978-0-9564493-2-0 1.Simonetti, Richard. Médiuns – Brazil. II. Title. CDD 920.913391 CDU 929 Introduction When I was asked to review this book, I realised it came to me for a reason. I have lost many friends to suicide. In an attempt to understand suicidal thought and action, we must use our compassion and empathy.
    [Show full text]
  • Pincock, Jenny O'hara (1890-1948)
    Please respect our copyright! We encourage you to view and print this document FOR PERSONAL USE, also to link to it directly from your website. Copying for any reason other than personal use requires the express written consent of the copyright holder: Survival Research Institute of Canada, PO Box 8697, Victoria, BC V8W 3S3 Canada Email: [email protected] Website: www.survivalresearch.ca First prepared in October 2006 by the Survival Research Institute of Canada (Debra Barr and Walter Meyer zu Erpen). Capitalization of any name or subject in the text below indicates that you will find an entry on that topic in the forthcoming third edition of Rosemary Ellen Guiley’s Encyclopedia of Ghosts and Spirits (October 2007). Pincock, Jenny O’Hara (1890-1948) Canadian author and spiritualist, and wife of Robert Newton Pincock (1883- 1928), Jenny Helena Florence O’Hara was born in 1890 at Madoc, Ontario, the daughter of Benson O’Hara. She is noted for two publications: Trails of Truth (1930) contains descriptions of Spiritualist séances held in a home circle in St. Catharines, Ontario, during 1928 and 1929; and Hidden Springs: A Narrative Poem of Old Upper Canada and Other Poems (1950), published post-humously. The latter includes a foreword by her husband’s friend Dr. E.J. Pratt, a prominent Canadian poet. In the séances detailed in Trails of Truth, the author's husband and other family members allegedly return through the American medium William Cartheuser (1890-1966) to prove their SURVIVAL AFTER DEATH. Cartheuser was well known for his DIRECT VOICE MEDIUMSHIP. Cartheuser’s spirit guide Dr.
    [Show full text]
  • The Body As Wound Possession, Malandros and Everyday Violence in Venezuela
    View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by Digital.CSIC The Body as Wound Possession, Malandros and Everyday Violence in Venezuela Francisco Ferrándiz Anthropology, University of Deusto, Bilbao, Spain Post‐print version. The final, definitive version of this paper has been published in Critique of Anthropology 24(2): 107‐133 (2004) by SAGE Publications Ltd., All rights reserved. http://coa.sagepub.com/ ABSTRACT During the 1990s, Venezuela saw both an intensification in the levels of everyday violence and in the ideological operations blaming the poor for this state of affairs, resulting in a large scale criminalization of shantytown dwellers, especially young men. This production of social stigma is of one piece with the implementation of repressive State policies. Based on a year long ethnographic fieldwork on the well‐known spirit possession cult of María Lionza in the shantytowns of Caracas, this paper discusses one relevant aspect of the extensive social trauma taking shape in the shadow of these events. As an emergent form of popular religion where different styles of embodiment are constantly being produced, the cult quickly activated a type of spirits dormant in its populous pantheon: the delinquents –malandros. These spirits, which became an instant success among young spiritist mediums, diagram the tragic encounter of scores of poor Venezuelans with the change of the century. KEY WORDS Venezuela, shantytowns, violence, youth, delinquency (‘malandros’), embodiment, social trauma, memory, spiritism. BIOGRAPHICAL INFORMATION Francisco Ferrándiz (PhD Universidad of California, Berkeley, 1996) is currently Associate Researcher in the Instituto de Lengua, Literatura y Antropología (ILLA) at the Spanish National Research Council (CSIC), Spain.
    [Show full text]
  • “A GOSPEL in the HOME” Meeting
    How to hold “A GOSPEL IN THE HOME” meeting MAKE PEACE AND HARMONY BLOSSOM IN YOUR HOME Campaign to bring the Teachings of Jesus into our homes and daily lives. This brochure is OFFERED GRATUITOUSLY for the purpose of stimulating fellowship amongst all Humanity N1864 - 2014 150 Years of “The Gospel According to Spiritism” by Allan Kardec This book can be freely distributed and copied, under the condition that no changes whatsoever are made in the text and its source is always provided. Cover design Konrad Jerzak. Printed by Rivail Publishing Sponsored and prepared by BUSS-UK: BRITISH UNION OF SPIRITIST SOCIETIES – BUSS Room 8, Oxford House Derbyshire Street Bethnal Green London E2 6HG, England – UK E-mail: [email protected] Tel: 02077293214 www.buss.org.uk UK Charity No. 1136512 Company Limited by Guarantee No. 6833566 INTRODUCTION This brochure is meant to help and guide us towards a more balanced way of life. It is also a recipe to help unite the family at a given moment so as to be able to cultivate peace and harmony, where otherwise there might be the occasional disagreement. In our troubled world at this special time of transition between two epochs, people often feel disturbed and sometimes even out of balance. A few moments of prayer together with a simple regular study of how best to live our lives, gives us time to rebalance ourselves, meditate a little and re-link with our Spiritual Benefactors. A few minutes each week given to a sincere study of what Jesus tried to teach us more than two thousand years ago will gradually allow us to realise the rationalisation and logic contained in these Teachings.
    [Show full text]