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Showing 1 - 3 of 3 matches in All Departments
Exactly where is the common ground between religion and medicine in phenomena described as "religious healing?" In what sense is the human body a cultural phenomenon and not merely a biological entity? Drawing on over twenty years of research on topics ranging from Navajo and Catholic Charismatic ritual healing to the cultural and religious implications of virtual reality in biomedical technology, Body/Meaning/Healing sensitively examines these questions about human experience and the meaning of being human. In recognizing the way that the meaningfulness of our existence as bodily beings is sometimes created in the encounter between suffering and the sacred, these penetrating ethnographic studies elaborate an experiential understanding of the therapeutic process, and trace the outlines of a cultural phenomenology grounded in embodiment.
Thomas Csordas's eloquent analysis of the Catholic Charismatic
Renewal answers one of the primary callings of anthropology: to
stimulate critical reflection by making the exotic seem familiar
and the familiar appear strange. Csordas describes the movement's
internal diversity and traces its development and expansion across
30 years. He offers insights into the contemporary nature of
rationality, the transformation of space and time in Charismatic
daily life, gender discipline, the blurring of boundaries between
ritual and everyday life, the sense of community forged through
shared ritual participation, and the creativity of language and
metaphor in prophetic utterance. Charisma, Csordas proposes, is a
collective self-process, located not in the personality of a
leader, but in the rhetorical resources mobilized by participants
in ritual performance. His examination of ritual language and
ritual performance illuminates this theory in relation to the
postmodern condition of culture.
Exactly where is the common ground between religion and medicine in
phenomena described as "religious healing?" In what sense is the
human body a cultural phenomenon and not merely a biological
entity? Drawing on over twenty years of research on topics ranging
from Navajo and Catholic Charismatic ritual healing to the cultural
and religious implications of virtual reality in biomedical
technology, Body/Meaning/Healing sensitively examines these
questions about human experience and the meaning of being human. In
recognizing the way that the meaningfulness of our existence as
bodily beings is sometimes created in the encounter between
suffering and the sacred, these penetrating ethnographic studies
elaborate an experiential understanding of the therapeutic process,
and trace the outlines of a cultural phenomenology grounded in
embodiment.
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