Spelling suggestions: "subject:"[een] RITUAL"" "subject:"[enn] RITUAL""
791 |
Animals, Identity and Cosmology: Mortuary Practice in Early Medieval Eastern EnglandRainsford, Clare E. January 2017 (has links)
The inclusion of animal remains in funerary contexts was a routine feature of Anglo-Saxon cremation ritual, and less frequently of inhumations, until the introduction of Christianity during the 7th century. Most interpretation has focused either on the animal as symbolic of identity or as an indication of pagan belief, with little consideration given to the interaction between these two aspects. Animals were a fundamental and ubiquitous part of early medieval society, and their contribution to mortuary practices is considered to be multifaceted, reflecting their multiple roles in everyday life.
This project considers the roles of animals in mortuary practice between the 5th-7th centuries across five counties in eastern England – Norfolk, Suffolk, Lincolnshire, Cambridgeshire and Essex – in both cremation and inhumation rites. Animal remains have been recognised in 5th to 7th century burials in eastern England from an early date, and the quality of the existing archives (both material and written) is investigated and discussed as an integral part of designing a methodology to effectively summarise data across a wide area. From the eastern England dataset, four aspects of identity in mortuary practice are considered in terms of their influence on the role of animals: choice of rite (cremation/inhumation); human biological identity (age & gender); regionality; and changing expressions of belief and status in the 7th century. The funerary role of animals is argued to be based around broadly consistent cosmologies which are locally contingent in their expression and practice. / Arts & Humanities Research Council Studentship under the Collaborative Doctoral Award scheme, with Norwich Castle Museum as the partner organisation
|
792 |
Vicuñas neoliberales y globalizadas : un estudio sobre la comunidad campesina de Lucanas y la (re)invención de un ritual en el proceso neoliberal peruano.Cépeda Cáceres, Mario Renato Martín 01 June 2015 (has links)
En la Comunidad Campesina de Lucanas (CCDL) se viene realizando, desde hace casi veinte años, un proyecto para la recuperación de la vicuña (vicugna vicugna mensalis) —el “Proyecto Vicuña” (PV)—. Se trata de la iniciativa comunal más grande para el manejo de ese animal en peligro a nivel nacional e internacional. Es en ese contexto en el que nace nuestra investigación al preguntarme de qué manera el manejo de la vicuña ha transformado la organización social local y, en específico, cómo se ha constituido como una nueva fuente de capital (social, económico y simbólico) en Lucanas.
|
793 |
Realms of Remembered Violence: The Emergence of Mass Murder Memorials in the United States, 1986-2012Hill, Jordan 14 October 2014 (has links)
This research explores the new tradition of creating mass murder memorials in the United States at the turn of the twenty-first century. Using written and oral history sources in combination with memorial designs, I explore the planning processes undertaken by five different communities: Virginia Tech, Columbine, University of Texas, Oklahoma City and Edmond, OK. I analyze what these case studies reveal about how changing cultural expectations and political needs transformed commemorative practices concerning violence in the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries. By exposing how the timely interventions of national figures increasingly shaped local commemorative aspirations, my research illuminates how the brief period of national unity in the immediate aftermath has been discursively and materially foregrounded as the heart of national public memory narratives of mass murder. I argue that at the turn of the twenty-first century the memory of victims of mass murders"assuming something akin to the role that fallen soldiers have played for the bulk of American history"are now viewed by a range of political, religious and cultural actors as a highly effective means of bolstering perceptions of local, organizational and national unity. This project contributes to the interdisciplinary literature on commemoration in three ways. First, I challenge the literature on memorials built in the immediate aftermath of violence and tragedy by illustrating how these memory sites are increasingly but the first stage of the material culture of public memory. Second, my theory of a ritualized assemblage develops the existing literature by forwarding a concept well suited to analyze the relationship of between seemingly disparate memory sites. Lastly, the rhetoric of what I call the Myth of the Slaughtered Citizen contributes to the literature on nationalism and commemoration by explaining how the victims of mass murder were culturally substituted into the commemorative role traditionally held by fallen soldiers to promote a sense of local and national unity. / Ph. D.
|
794 |
An Introduction to the Study of Henges: Time for a Change?Gibson, Alex M. January 2012 (has links)
Yes / This paper summarises 80 years of 'henge' studies. It considers the range of monuments originally considered henges and how more
diverse sites became added to the original list. It examines the diversity of monuments considered to be henges, their origins, their
associated monument types and their dates. Since the introduction of the term, archaeologists have often been uncomfortable with it.
It was introduced in inverted commas and those commas continued to be used for over 30 years. With the introduction of the term
'hengiform' the strictures of definition that characterised the monument class collapsed and an increased variety of circular and oval
monuments were included under the henge aegis. It is suggested here that the term 'henge' has outlived its usefulness as we no longer
know what we mean by it. Instead we should adopt an objective viewpoint and recognise these earth circles as just one manifestation
of the tradition of circularity that pervades the third and second millennia BC.
|
795 |
Death and Display in the North Atlantic: The Bronze and Iron Age Human Remains from Cnip, Lewis, Outer HebridesArmit, Ian, Shapland, F. January 2015 (has links)
Yes / This paper revisits the series of disarticulated human remains discovered during the 1980s excavations of the Cnip wheelhouse complex in Lewis. Four fragments of human bone, including two worked cranial fragments, were originally dated to the 1st centuries BC/AD based on stratigraphic association. Osteoarchaeological reanalysis and AMS dating now provide a broader cultural context for these remains and indicate that at least one adult cranium was brought to the site more than a thousand years after the death of the individual to whom it had belonged.
|
796 |
Il vaso antropomorfo nel Neolitico: origine, funzione e significatoBersani, Monica 31 October 2019 (has links)
This research deals with the phenomenon of anthropomorphic vessels between the 7th and the beginning of the 5th millennium BC in a vast area that includes the Italian peninsula with Sicily, Central Europe, the Balkans and the Near East. The survey concerned 927 specimens from 229 sites. The formal analysis of the artifacts belonging to the cultures attested between Mesopotamia and the Rhine river allowed to establish the times and vectors of diffusion of this tradition before its arrival in Italy, as well as to hypothesize the connections that have transmitted the tradition of the anthropomorphic vessel to the Neolithic farming communities in the south-east of southern Italy. The study of Italian finds has led to the recognition of four main areas affected by the phenomenon and has allowed us to define their styles. An important part of the study was the examination of the archaeological contexts of the finds, in order to understand the possible spheres of use. In particular, the research allowed us to highlight the frequent and widespread presence of the anthropomorphic vessel in waste pits together with a series of symbolic objects: a constant presence and therefore not random, which is a hint of deliberate deposition of selected materials. This circumstance suggests that the anthropomorphic vessel belongs to a set of objects of ritual use and that the Neolithic refuse pit, contrary to what is generally believed, should be interpreted also as places of performative activity.
|
797 |
Purity : blessing or burden?Depoix, D. J. 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MPhil)--Stellenbosch University, 2002 / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: During the history of Israel the concept of "purity"
had developed as a way in which God's people could honour
his holiness and draw nearer to him, as a sanctified
nation. By the time of Jesus, in Second Temple Judaism,
the purity system had become restrictive. This had been
influenced by political and social developments, including
an increased desire to withdraw from Hellenistic and other
factors which were seen as contaminating the integrity of
Judaism.
There were diverse perceptions regarding the
achievement of the purity of Israel, including
militaristic confrontation and expulsion of alien
occupation forces, stricter adherence to the Law and, in
some cases, total withdrawal from general society (such as
at Qumran). It was, however, particularly the Pharisaic
imposition of the supplementary oral tradition, supposed
to clarify the written Law, which imposed hardship on
those who, through illiteracy or inferior social status,
were unable to meet all the minute provisions which would
ensure ritual purity. The expansion of the Law of Moses
by the commentary of the rabbis, which over time became
the entrenched oral "tradition of the fathers", was
originally intended to promote access to God by clarifying
obscure points of the Law, in the pursuit of purity.
However, this oral tradition had, in fact, become an
instrument of alienation and separation of the ordinary people not only from the Pharisees, who considered
themselves as the religious elite, but also from God.
The common people, that is, a large section of the
population, felt rejected and on the outside of both
religious and social acceptance. On the material level
they also suffered under a heavy tax burden, from both
Temple and State, which aggravated their poverty.
It was this situation which Jesus confronted in his
mission to change the ideological climate and to reveal
the Kingdom of God as being accessible to all who accepted
the true Fatherhood of God, in penitence and humility.
He denounced the hypocrisy which professed piety but which
ignored the plight of those who were suffering.
Hark 7 : 1-23 symbolizes the difference between the
teaching and practice of Jesus and that of the Pharisees,
and provides metaphorically a pattern of Christian
engagement which is relevant in the South African
situation today.
The Christian challenge is to remove those barriers,
both ideological and economic, which impede spiritual and
material well-being within society. By active engagement,
rather than by retreating to the purely ritualistic and
individualistic practice of religion, the realization of
the Kingdom of Heaven, as inaugurated by Jesus, will be
advanced. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Gedurende die geskiedenis van Israel het die konsep van reinheid ontwikkel as 'n
wyse waarin die die volk van God Sy heiligheid kan eer en tot Hom kan nader, as 'n
geheiligde volk. Teen die tyd van Jesus, tydens Tweede Tempel Judaïsme, het die
reinheid sisteem beperkend geword. Dit is beïnvloed deur politieke en sosiale
ontwikkelinge, insluitende 'n toenemende drang om te onttrek van Hellenistiese en
ander faktore, wat beskou is as 'n besoedeling van die integriteit van Judaïsme.
Daar was diverse persepsies aangaande die uitvoering van die reinheid van Israel,
insluitende militaristiese konfrontasie en die uitwerping van vreemde
besettingsmagte, strenger onderhouding van die Wet en in sekere gevalle, totale
onttreking van die algemene samelewing (soos by Qumran). Tog was dit in besonder
die Fariseërs se oplegging van bykomende mondelinge tradisie, veronderstelom die
geskrewe Wet te verhelder, wat ontbering veroorsaak het vir die wat as gevolg van
ongeletterdheid of minderwaardige sosiale status nie in staat was om aan elke haarfyn
bepaling, wat rituele reinheid sou verseker, te voldoen nie. Die uitbreiding van die wet
van Moses deur die kommentaar van die rabbies, wat met verloop van tyd die
ingegrawe mondelinge "tradisie van die vaders" geword het, was oorsproklik bedoel
om toegang tot God te verseker, deur die verheldering van onduidelike aspekte van
die wet, in die nastreef van reinheid.
Hierdie mondelinge tradisie het egter 'n instrument van vervreemding geword en
skeiding gebring tussen gewone mense en die Fariseers, sowel as die wat hulleself
beskou het as die religieuse elite. Dit het egter ook skeiding gebring tussen mense en
God.
Die gewone mense, dit is die meerderheid van die bevolking, het verwerp gevoel en
aan die buitekring van beide religieuse en sosiale aanvaarding. Op materiële vlak het
hulle ook gelyonder die juk van swaar belasting, van beide die Tempel en die Staat,
wat hulle toestand van armoede vererger het.
Dit was hierdie situasie wat Jesus gekonfronteer het in sy strewe om die ideologiese
klimaat te verander en om die Koninkryk van God te openbaar as toeganklik vir almal wat die ware Vaderskap van God aanvaar, in berou en in nederigheid. Hy het die
skynheiligheid verwerp wat aanspraak maak op vroomheid, maar die toestand van die
lydendes ignoreer.
Markus 7:1-23 simboliseer die verskil tussen die onderrig en die praktyk van Jesus en
dié van die Fariseërs en voorsien metafories 'n patroon van Christelike verbintenis,
wat relevant is binne die eietydse Suid-Afrikaanse konteks.
Die uitdaging aan die Christendom is om die skeidslyne te verwyder, beide ideologies
en ekonomies, wat geestelike en materieële welsyn binne die gemeenskap belemmer.
Deur aktiewe betrokkenheid, eerder as om bloot te onttrek tot die suiwer ritualistiese
en individualistiese beoefening van religie, sal die realisering van die Koninkryk van
die Hemel soos ingehuldig deur Jesus, bevorder word.
|
798 |
"Det som är norm i vardagen är inte norm här" : Svenska konvent som sekulära ritualerLönn, Mathilda January 2017 (has links)
The purpose of this thesis is to establish whether Swedish fan conventions organised around East-Asian popular culture such as anime and manga can be identified as a form of secular ritual. The methods used to determine this include participant observation, interviews and ethnographic data. Defining secular ritual as a performance event that establishes an alternative context that transforms the everyday without being connected to a religious or supernatural worldview or origin, we find that Swedish conventions of this kind may be called a form of ritual that engages people united by a common, broad field of interests and a notion of being outside of society’s norms in different ways, most notably in regards to sexuality and gender. This opens a discussion about Swedish fan conventions and how they may inform us about the use and function of rituals in a secularised society.
|
799 |
Hope Rites : An Ethnographic Study of Mechanical Help-Heart Implantation Treatment / Hoppets riter : En etnografisk studie av behandling med mekaniskt hjälphjärtaAgic, Haris January 2012 (has links)
This thesis is about cultural aspects of advanced medical technology for treating end-stage heart failure. New medical technologies like mechanical help-hearts save lives, but they also bring new uncertainties, risks, and challenges. Based on nine months of ethnographic field work in a Swedish academic hospital, this study examines the ways of managing uncertainties of end-stage heart failure and of high-tech treatment, and also how these practices tie into the shared understandings of life-threatening chronic illness, the body, and medical technology’s role. This study draws on anthropological discussions of healing rituals as an analytical tool to make sense of social and cultural dimensions of mechanical help-heart implantation treatment. Viewed as a ritual, this treatment creates and maintains hope as a virtue through which possibilities of new medical technology are justified as culturally approved ways of handling the uncertainties of severe heart failure and mechanical help-heart treatment. Ultimately, even when treatment is regarded as successful, the patients may be saved but are never really ‘cured’ and remain, thus, permanently tied to the world of medicine. This new mode of existence is characterized by paradoxical permanent transit between uncertainty and hope. / Avhandlingen fokuserar på de kulturella aspekterna av den medicinska teknologin som används vid behandling av svår hjärtsvikt. Samtidigt som ny medicinsk teknologi som mekaniska hjälphjärtan räddar liv för den även med sig ovisshet och nya utmaningar som ofta är svåra att förutse. Baserat på nio månaders etnografiskt fältarbete vid ett universitetssjukhus i Sverige undersöks hur denna ovisshet och dessa utmaningar hanteras av medicinskt personal och patienter. I avhandlingen behandlas också sambanden mellan medicinska praktiker och de lokalt delade uppfattningarna om livshotande kroniska sjukdomar, den mänskliga kroppen och teknologins roll. Utifrån diskussioner inom antropologin om ’helande ritualer’ analyseras i avhandlingen de sociala och kulturella aspekterna av behandling med mekaniskt hjälphjärta. Studien visar att genom de rituella aspekterna av denna behandling, genereras och upprätthålls hoppet som en dygd. Den nya medicinska teknologins möjligheter rättfärdigas på så sätt som ett kulturellt accepterat sätt att hantera ovissheten vid svår hjärtsvikt och behandling med mekaniskt hjälphjärta. Även vid lyckade behandlingar, då patienternas liv räddas, blir de trots allt inte riktigt ’botade’ utan förblir bundna till den medicinska världen. Detta nya levnadssätt karakteriseras av en paradoxal och livslång balansgång mellan ovisshet och hopp.
|
800 |
Omýt ústa bubnu / Washing the mouth of a kettledrumKoubková, Evelyne January 2016 (has links)
The purpose of the present thesis is to analyse a particular ritual treatment, the so-called mouth- washing, appearing in diverse rituals of ancient Mesopotamia and its implications for the status of the ritual object treated in this way. Instead of generalizing the function of this element as known from the eponymous Mouth washing ritual for induction of cult images, this thesis considers its employment in all its attested occurrences. The author assumes a strongly metaphorical character of mouth-washing and analyses the concept of purity underlying it. Its shifting significance in different rituals is observed and a typology of these is outlined. A following case study is devoted to the Ritual for covering a kettledrum. A close examination of the sources reveals a possible development of the tradition as well as the ritual's interconnectedness with the Mouth washing ritual. This relation is treated as a case of interrituality, a concept introduced by Burkhard Gladigow. The divine status of the kettledrum is achieved through the ritual for its covering which intentionally employs elements used in the ritual induction of cult images. A special emphasis laid on the kettledrum's status in Seleucid Uruk corresponds with wider socio-historical changes. Methodologically, the offered interpretation rests...
|
Page generated in 0.0582 seconds