Promising Rituals

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A01=Beatrix Hauser
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Author_Beatrix Hauser
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Category1=Non-Fiction
Category=JHMC
Colonial Administration
COP=United Kingdom
Deity Possession
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Divine Possession
Eastern India
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eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
ethnographic fieldwork Orissa
Female Religiosity
female ritual specialists
Fierce Goddess
Gender identity
Girl Friends
Goddess Festival
Hindu women's agency
Language_English
Local Tv Station
Married Women
Menstrual Pollution
Menstrual Practices
Menstruating Women
Nocturnal Procession
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Performativity
Possession Episodes
Pot Bearer
Price_€20 to €50
Private Tv Channel
PS=Active
purity and pollution
religious fasting practices
Ritual agency
ritual performance studies
Sacred Basket
Sacred Pots
Social Immunity
softlaunch
Southern Orissa
Tamil Nadu
Temporary Shrine
Vice Versa
Votive Rites
women's ritual identity construction
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138665033
  • Weight: 370g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 21 Jan 2016
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
  • Language: English
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This book shows how the performance of rituals influences the understanding that Hindu women form of their own selves, their sense of femininity, identity as well as their role and position in the lived-in world, and vice versa. Drawn from an intensive ethnographic fieldwork in southern Orissa, each section of the book takes a close look at a specific ritual practice, in exploring concepts such as purity/pollution, religious observances (such as fasting), deity possession, associated beliefs and attitudes, as also celebrated traditions such as Thākurānī Yātrā, local processions, and the role of female ritual specialists.

The study uses the premise that religious practices in themselves are neither restricting nor liberating; rather rituals provide a perceptual context with the ability to affect the self-understanding of participants, as also their conception of agency, in a way that spills across non-ritual spheres. Conceptualizing gender identity as resulting from seen, but mostly unnoticed, everyday activities and approaching cultural performances as sites of collectively defining the self, the author offers a telling and vivid account of how women perceive, realize and reflect on religious ideas, while engaging in rituals and, by doing so, negotiate complex gender norms. The book also examines the assumptions of recent theories on the social construction of identities, often-debated impact of religion on women, performativity, self-identity, and ritual agency in considering ‘doing’ gender in a traditional, non-Western context.

This book will serve as essential reading for scholars of sociology, anthropology, gender studies, cultural studies, history, religion, performance, and folklore studies.

Beatrix Hauser is Adjunct Associate Professor (Privatdozentin), Institute of Social and Cultural Anthropology, Martin-Luther-University, Halle-Wittenberg, Germany. She holds a PhD and a Habilitation (Postdoctoral Lecture Qualification) in social anthropology. Her research interests lie in anthropology of the body, anthropology of religion, anthropology of theatre and performance, visual anthropology, transculturality and gender. She has published numerous articles in various international journals and edited volumes, and is the author of Mit irdischem Schaudern und göttlicher Fügung: Bengalische Erzähler und ihre Bildvorführungen [With Earthly Dread and Divine Decree: Bengali Storytellers and their Scroll Performances] (1998), in German; and Yoga Traveling: Conceptualizing Body and Self in Transcultural Perspective (edited volume, forthcoming).

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