Spirit possession and cultural innovation: the case of two Japanese female religious leaders

Autores/as

  • Ordep J. Trindade-Serra Trindade-Serra Universidade Federal da Bahia. Departamento de Antropologia

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.11606/1678-9857.ra.1995.111439

Palabras clave:

afro-brazilian cults, Jorge Amado, synchretism, symbolic anthropology.

Resumen

Jorge Amado, one of lhe most renowned brazilian writers, has in many of his novels focused thc afrobrazilian cult named candomblé, as it is practised in Bahia. We can say that a great deal of the more generalized ideas about bahian candomblé owe to Amado's novels their world widespread diffusion. But of course Amado's presentation of this cult is not a documentary, ethnographic report. His literary interpretation of candomblé symbolic system deserves anthopological consideration; particulary Amado's personal envolvement with lhe candomblé's world is to be studied from an anthropological point of view: though he defines himself as an atheist, Amado has taken a firm stand as a champion of the synchretim between catholic and afrobrazilian rites. This paper deals with Amado's treatment of catholic and afrobrazilian synchretism in his novels Tenda dos milagres and O sumiço da santa.

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Biografía del autor/a

  • Ordep J. Trindade-Serra Trindade-Serra, Universidade Federal da Bahia. Departamento de Antropologia
    Depto. de Antropologia - UFBa

Publicado

1995-06-18

Número

Sección

Artículos

Cómo citar

Trindade-Serra, O. J. T.-S. (1995). Spirit possession and cultural innovation: the case of two Japanese female religious leaders. Revista De Antropologia, 38(1), 101-168. https://doi.org/10.11606/1678-9857.ra.1995.111439