Brazilian Spiritism (espiritismo, kardecismo) is an important
middle-class religious movement whose followers believe in
communication with the dead via spirit mediums and in healing
illnesses by means of spiritual therapies. Unlike Anglo-Saxon
Spiritualists, Brazilian Spiritists count among their number a
well-developed and institutionalized intellectual elite that has
reinterpreted northern hemisphere parapsychology and developed its
own alternative medicine and sociology of religion. As a result,
the mediation between popular religion (especially Afro-Brazilian
religious practices) and the orthodoxies of the universities, the
state, and the medical profession.
Situating Spiritist intellectual thought in what he calls a
broader ideological arena, Hess examines Spiritism in the context
of religion, science, political ideology, medicine, and even the
social sciences. Hess challenges the legacy of French sociologist
Roger Bastide, who saw in Spiritism an elitist, middle-class
ideology. In the process, Spirits and Scientists provides a new
approach to middle-class religious movements in Latin America.
General
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