Religion, Ritual and Ritualistic Objects
Language: English Publication details: MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute 2019Description: 1 electronic resource (240 p.)ISBN:- books978-3-03897-753-7
- 9783038977520
- 9783038977537
- South America
- Templar Order
- symbol
- continuing bonds
- objects
- assassination
- Buddhist worship and repentance ritual
- Dogon
- Abui
- healing
- procession
- children
- cow dung
- Ravana
- nizarism
- sema-taui
- religious transfer of meaning
- ethnography
- digital games
- Manichaeism
- ritual
- ritualizing
- Hinduism
- Alor-Pantar Archipelago
- India
- traditional religions
- sacred geography
- funeral
- material culture
- ritual creativity
- gender
- ritual manual
- place of pilgrimage
- Bible
- funerary photography
- oral legends and myths
- libation ritual
- initiation
- ritualism
- sacral tree
- Sinhalese Buddhist Majority
- Diagram of the Universe
- embodiment
- symbolic anthropology
- mask
- colonial period
- Govardhan puja
- Sri Lanka
- nature
- ankh
- imaginative embodiment
- ritual art
- Lamòling
- Vi??u’s footprint
- multiple readings of images
- Alor
- Xiapu manuscripts
- kingship
- death ritual
- rituality
- performance
- Nilotic lotus
- human-nonhuman sociality
Open Access star Unrestricted online access
This is a volume about the life and power of ritual objects in their religious ritual settings. In this Special Issue, we see a wide range of contributions on material culture and ritual practices across religions. By focusing on the dynamic interrelations between objects, ritual, and belief, it explores how religion happens through symbolic materiality. The ritual objects presented in this volume include: masks worn in the Dogon dance; antique ecclesiastical silver objects carried around in festive processions and shown in shrines in the southern Andes; funerary photographs and films functioning as mnemonic objects for grieving children; a dented rock surface perceived to be the god’s footprint in the archaic place of pilgrimage, Gaya (India); a recovered manual of rituals (from Xiapu county) for Mani, the founder of Manichaeism, juxtaposed to a Manichaean painting from southern China; sacred stories and related sacred stones in the Alor–Pantar archipelago, Indonesia; lotus symbolism, indicating immortalizing plants in the mythic traditions of Egypt, the Levant, and Mesopotamia;
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English