Emotion and corporal experience in the trajectory of conversion: a case study
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.7322/jhgd.19805Keywords:
Body, Emotions, Religion, Gender, FamilyAbstract
This article discusses the relationship that exists between illness, emotions, and the body in narratives concerning religious cures. The point of departure are concrete cases of women who have converted to neo-Pentecostalism and who relate how they discovered an alternative to dealing with their afflictions and suffering through religious rites and rituals. Their stories of conversion revolve around lives characterized by loss of self-esteem, and their subsequent conversions took place during moments of crisis or as a result of extraordinary events that interrupted the normal course of their lives. The converted women are almost unanimous in affirming that their conversions came about as the result of a search for the cure for an illness. However, the illness they refer to is a generic view beneath which lies evidence that shifts the listeners' attention to the efficient nature of the religious rituals. Thus, their initial motivation in seeking for conversion was not related solely to their illnesses, but to a prior series of problem situations that went beyond the actual physical ailments in themselves. Inspired by an anthropology of emotions, this text aims to analyze how religious conversion helped these women to better face their personal and family conflicts, creating a self-awareness that helped them to reemerge from the depths of their despair.Downloads
References
Le Breton D. Anthropologie du corps etmodernité. Paris: PUF; 1990.
Schimitt JC. Les corps, les rites, les rêves, letemps: essais d’anthropologie médiévale. Paris: Gallimard; 2001.
Birman P. Cultos de possessão e pentecostalismo no Brasil: passagens. Relig Soc. 1996;17:90-109.
Geertz C. Bali: interprétation d’une culture. Paris: Gallimard; 1983.
Pace E. Religião e globalização. In: Oro AP, Steil CA, organizadores. Globalização e religião. Rio de Janeiro: Vozes; 1999. p. 25-42.
Lutz C. The domain of emotion words on Ifaluk. Am Ethnol. 1982;9(1):113-28.
Crapanzano V. Réflexions sur une anthropologiedes émotions. Terrain (Paris). 1994;22:109-17.
Abu-Lughod L, Lutz C. Language and the politics of emotions. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1990. p. 108-15, apud V. Crapanzano (Vincent Crapanzano, Réflexionssur une anthropologie des émotions. Terrain(Paris). 1994;22:109-17)
Mauss M. L’expression obligatoire dessentiments (rituels oraux funéraires australiens).Paris: Minuit; 1969.
Durkheim E. Les formes élémentaires de la viereligieuse. Paris: PUF; 1968.
Levy R, Rosaldo M, editores. Ethos.1983;11(3):128-34.
Levy R. Tahitian: mind and experience in the society of islands. Chicago: University of Chicago Press; 1973.
Rosaldo M. Knowledge and passion: ilongotnotions of self and social life. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1980.
Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License
CODE OF CONDUCT FOR JOURNAL PUBLISHERS
Publishers who are Committee on Publication Ethics members and who support COPE membership for journal editors should:
- Follow this code, and encourage the editors they work with to follow the COPE Code of Conduct for Journal Edi- tors (http://publicationethics.org/files/u2/New_Code.pdf)
- Ensure the editors and journals they work with are aware of what their membership of COPE provides and en- tails
- Provide reasonable practical support to editors so that they can follow the COPE Code of Conduct for Journal Editors (http://publicationethics.org/files/u2/New_Code.pdf_)
Publishers should:
- Define the relationship between publisher, editor and other parties in a contract
- Respect privacy (for example, for research participants, for authors, for peer reviewers)
- Protect intellectual property and copyright
- Foster editorial independence
Publishers should work with journal editors to:
- Set journal policies appropriately and aim to meet those policies, particularly with respect to:
– Editorial independence
– Research ethics, including confidentiality, consent, and the special requirements for human and animal research
– Authorship
– Transparency and integrity (for example, conflicts of interest, research funding, reporting standards
– Peer review and the role of the editorial team beyond that of the journal editor
– Appeals and complaints
- Communicate journal policies (for example, to authors, readers, peer reviewers)
- Review journal policies periodically, particularly with respect to new recommendations from the COPE
- Code of Conduct for Editors and the COPE Best Practice Guidelines
- Maintain the integrity of the academic record
- Assist the parties (for example, institutions, grant funders, governing bodies) responsible for the investigation of suspected research and publication misconduct and, where possible, facilitate in the resolution of these cases
- Publish corrections, clarifications, and retractions
- Publish content on a timely basis