The Wiley Blackwell companion to religion and materiality /
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Otros Autores: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Hoboken :
Wiley,
2019.
|
Edición: | First edition. |
Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Cover
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- About the Editor
- Notes on Contributors
- Chapter 1 The Persistence, Ubiquity, and Dynamicity of Materiality: Studying Religion and Materiality Comparatively
- 1.1 The Persistence of Materiality
- 1.2 Sources of the Ambivalence Towards Materiality
- 1.3 Characterizing the Turn to Materiality
- 1.3.1 The Recovery of the Body
- 1.3.2 Bodies and Things in and of the Material World
- 1.4 The Collection
- Notes
- Works Cited
- Section I Religious Bodies
- Chapter 2 The Incarnate Body and Blood in Christianity
- 2.1 Medieval Materiality and the Body of Christ
- 2.2 The Word Made Flesh and Blood
- 2.2.1 Shaping Body
- 2.2.2 Sweating Blood
- 2.2.3 Wounded Body
- 2.2.4 Blood After Death
- 2.3 Conclusion
- Acknowledgments
- Notes
- Works Cited
- Chapter 3 Perspectives on Rabbinic Constructions of Gendered Bodies
- 3.1 Introduction
- 3.2 The Rabbinic 'Body': Adam
- 3.3 Rabbinic Bodies: The Androginos (and the Tumtum)
- 3.4 Rabbinic Constructions of Gender: A Provisional Spectrum
- 3.5 Doing Rabbinic Gender: Male and Female Performative Acts
- 3.6 Rabbinic Bodies
- 3.7 The Primal Androgyne and the Androginos
- 3.8 Conclusion: Perspectival Gender, Where and How We Look Matters
- Notes
- Works Cited
- Chapter 4 The One and the Many: Ancestors and Sorcerers in Hohodene Worldview
- 4.1 'With Shame He Comes': The Hidden Anomaly
- 4.2 Inside and Outside, Open and Closed: Duality in Kuwai's Body
- 4.3 Viscera, Body Fluids, and their Significance
- 4.4 Kuwai and Growth: The Ancestral Heart/Soul (ikaale) of the Sun Father
- 4.5 Sacred Sounds and Growth
- 4.5.1 Kuwai-ka Wamundana: By Parts
- 4.6 Body Adornments
- 4.7 Connections to Sacred Geography
- 4.8 Conclusion
- Notes
- Works Cited
- Chapter 5 Cognitive Science, Embodiment, and Materiality
- 5.1 Introduction
- 5.2 The Problematic Meaning of Embodied Cognitive Science
- 5.3 Functionalism, Embodiment, and Materiality
- 5.4 Conclusion
- Works Cited
- Section II Practices and Performances
- Chapter 6 From Bells to Bottus: Analysing the Body and Materiality of Indian Dance in an American University Context
- 6.1 'Dance and Embodied Knowledge': Conceptualizing the Course (jbf)
- 6.2 Nakha Sikha: Descriptions of the Body from Toe to Head (hmk)
- 6.3 Dancing Feet (jbf)
- 6.3.1 Bare Feet
- 6.3.2 Bells
- 6.4 Bent Knees and Straight Back (hmk)
- 6.5 Mudras: Expressive Hands (hmk)
- 6.6 Face, Eyes, and Hair (jbf)
- 6.7 Vesham: Materiality of Clothing and Ornamentation
- 6.7.1 Practice Vesham
- 6.7.2 Vesham in Performance
- 6.8 Materiality in Motion: The Full Dancing Body
- 6.9 Carrying Indian Embodied Dance Knowledge into New Contexts
- Notes
- Works Cited
- Chapter 7 Spirit Incorporation in Candomblé
- 7.1 Precedents
- 7.2 Materializing Spirit Incorporation in Candomblé
- 7.3 Affordances and Constraints
- 7.3.1 Spirit Incorporation is Gendered