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Women's ritual in China: Jiezhu (receiving Buddhist prayer beads) peformed by menopausal women in Ninghua, Western Fhjian. / CUHK electronic theses & dissertations collectionJanuary 2007 (has links)
Amituofo recitation is the chanting of the phrase "namo Amituofo , which is a rite commonly used among Buddhists for the attainment of merit. However, the attained merits would be nullified if the initiate gets pregnant after she has done Jiezhu. This has much to do with taboos related to female sexuality. Women always have a marginalized status as the supposedly "weaker" gender having a lower social position. The association of female bodily discharges with defilement further discredits their status. Jiezhu in effect reinforces the idea of "defilement" attributed to the female body. The shame that the women feel with the male-defined negative female bodily image affirms the patriarchal hegemony. / Based on historical, textual and field studies, this thesis examines a women-oriented initiation rite called Jiezhu. Jiezhu, a once-in-a-lifetime rite of passage, is performed by menopausal women in Ninghua, Western Fujian, China. / However, ritualistic acts provide therapeutic healing. The Jiezhu woman has to go through a stage in which she has to handle the change of her role and identity as a life-giver (mothering) with the end of her procreative cycle. The ritual provides both private and public meanings to the woman and helps her relieve the physical and mental difficulties that she faces in her menopausal stage. / It is believed in the villages of Ninghua that when a woman reaches her menopausal age, she has to do Jiezhu, without which, her Amituofo recitation (nianfo) would not be efficacious. In other words, Jiezhu, as a pre-requisite for Amituofo recitation, is at the same time a purification rite. / Jiezhu appropriates the woman into a new phase of being by first providing private meanings to her. Ritualistic acts can bridge memory and imagination. The ritual program allows the woman to go back and forth the past, the present and the future. Jiezhu dramatically juxtaposes girlhood and mature womanhood, reenacts her wedding and rehearses her future funeral. Death and rebirth symbols abound. In Jiezhu, the woman "witnesses" her own funerary rites to ensure abundant personal possessions are burned for her to receive in the underworld after her death. The woman acquires spiritual strength to ease off from her menopausal stress and to allay the fears of the approach of death. Jiezhu and Amituofo recitation make up a twin tool they use to ensure a more fortunate rebirth. / Second, Jiezhu gives social meanings. The woman is given a new identity. She is now eligible for Amituofo recitation and becomes a member of the nianfo community. As social inferiority can be compensated for by a show of lavishness, Jiezhu as an expensive event creates symbolic capital. Jiezhu has become a symbol of prestige and resources that in part enhances the status of the women. / The women are also able to express their power within the limits of their traditional politics. The woman's contributions as a wife and a mother are valued and celebrated in the Jiezhu ceremony. The youthful, bright and colourful gift items given by the married daughter display a defiant tone against the association of Jiezhu with old age. Jiezhu celebrates an oft-neglected life crisis of women. / To conclude, Jiezhu on the one hand "traditionalizes", and on the other hand, as a strategic mode of action, challenges traditions through religious and social empowerment. Jiezhu preserves the established order but it also facilitates transformation in the initiate. The two dynamics of ritual are not antithetical; they produce and contend with each other. / Cheung, Tak Ching Neky. / "September 2007." / Adviser: Chi Tim Lai. / Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 69-08, Section: A, page: 3178. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 2007. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 390-406). / Electronic reproduction. Hong Kong : Chinese University of Hong Kong, [2012] System requirements: Adobe Acrobat Reader. Available via World Wide Web. / Electronic reproduction. [Ann Arbor, MI] : ProQuest Information and Learning, [200-] System requirements: Adobe Acrobat Reader. Available via World Wide Web. / Abstracts in English and Chinese. / School code: 1307.
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The impact on religious involvement of women in the paid labour force, 1975-2005Desjarlais-deKlerk, Kristen Ann, University of Lethbridge. Faculty of Arts and Science January 2009 (has links)
Canadians’ religious involvement has declined significantly over the last thirty years (Bibby 2004a), but explanations haven’t successfully determined the reasons for the decline. Women’s employment rate increased significantly during the same time period, which could account for the decline, particularly as Canadians have become increasingly pragmatic about time following the rise of the dual earner family. This thesis postulates that Canadians’ pragmatism dominates religious involvement, particularly as Canadians have less time to engage in those activities and tasks they deem necessary and worthwhile. It examines the costs and benefits of religious involvement—utilizing a rational choice framework—and insists that religious groups need to respond more effectively to affiliates’ needs and desires. The data demonstrates that Canadians’ perception of worth of their religious involvement (as measured through enjoyment) better predicts involvement than association. / xiii, 131 leaves ; 29 cm.
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God's image or man's glory? : a Kenyan postcolonial feminist reading of 1 Corinthians 11:1-16.Mwaniki, Lydia Muthoni. January 2011 (has links)
This study uses a postcolonial feminist analysis to show how a biblical text (1 Cor 11:1-16),
because of its patriarchal and imperial background, excludes women from the image of God. It
demonstrates how this text has been taken up, developed and appropriated to support the
subordination of women throughout the Christian tradition from the Church Fathers to the
reformers and right up to the present day postcolonial Kenyan Church context. While this text
has been used for a long time to oppress women, this study argues that a critical reading of the
text from a postcolonial feminist perspective shows that gender disparity exists in this and in
other gender-biased Pauline and post-Pauline texts because they were based on the existing
patriarchal and imperial structures, which subordinated women to men. Further the study
demonstrates that the texts have continued to subordinate women to men throughout the history
of Christian tradition. Most churches, such as the Anglican Church, express belief in the
Scriptures. Yet such churches like the Anglican Church of Kenya, which seemingly supports
gender equality through its gender inclusive article in its Constitution, does not offer guidance
about how such texts are to be read and appropriated by Christians. The study offers a method to
fill this gap. It is hoped that the academy and the church will avail themselves of this method in
their reading practices of the Bible. It takes into account the history of gender and imperial biases
in the construction of texts such as 1 Cor 11:1-16 that exclude women from the image of God. / Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2011.
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Subordinate saints : women and the founding of Third Church, Boston, 1669-1674Johnson, Melissa Ann 01 January 2009 (has links)
Although seventeenth-century New England has been one of the most heavily studied subjects in American history, women's lived experience of Puritan church membership has been incompletely understood. Histories of New England's Puritan churches have often assumed membership to have had universal implications, and studies of New England women either have focused on dissenting women or have neglected women's religious lives altogether despite the centrality of religion to the structure of New England society and culture.
This thesis uses pamphlets, sermons, and church records to demonstrate that women's church membership in Massachusetts's Puritan churches differed from men's because women were prohibited from speaking in church or from voting in church government. Despite the Puritan emphasis on spiritual equality, women experienced a modified form of membership stemming from their subordinate place in the social hierarchy.
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Precious Blood Charism and Active Ministry: How Sisters in Public Schools Influenced Religious LifeHess, Matthew Peter 08 September 2016 (has links)
No description available.
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Gift or poison?: women's experience of the church with reference to certain women in the Eastern Cape.Groves, Susan Clare 11 1900 (has links)
This dissertation examines the experience that women have of the church. Work was done with groups of women in the Eastern Cape to hear their first hand experiences on this subject. A study was also made of the experiences of women as recorded in other parts of Africa and the world. South African women are situated within the broader context of society, thus also matters pertaining to this broader context were examined.The situation facing South African women in society and within the church is complex and difficult. In the final chapter, rather than looking at how women could change external structures, the focus is on women paying attention to themselves. The great importance of women honouring themselves, and giving themselves priority, and that of developing a spiritual practice that is nurturing and relevant to
their lives, were suggested as a prerequisite for effective change on a wider level. An emphasis was thus put on the inner world of the woman, where, it is argued, many South African women need to experience a revolution. That women need support in this journey was stressed, with the participation in women's groups seen as being transforming for women. / Systematic Theology / Th. M. (System Theology)
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Toward a feminist ecclesiology of memory and hope in the context of the HIV/AIDS pandemicManske, Yvonne Janine 12 1900 (has links)
Assignment (M. Div.)--University of Stellenbosch, 2006. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: HIV/AIDS has a great impact on lives of all South Africans – but especially on women.
HIV/AIDS also presents the greatest threat and danger to the ones living in poverty and
without sufficient education and independence in relationships –that mostly includes South
African women. In a first chapter I will discuss the connection between poverty and
HIV/AIDS as well as between HIV/AIDS and the status of women in South Africa. In a
second chapter I want to discuss a feminist ecclesiology of memory and hope and how it is
presented by the catholic feminist theologian Elizabeth A. Johnson. In a third chapter I
want to use the feminist ecclesiology of memory and hope to link it with the context of
South Africa. In that last part I want to give a framework of the effect that a feminist
ecclesiology of memory and hope could have on the South African society. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: HIV/VIGS het 'n groot impak op die lewe van alle Suid-Afrikaners - veral op die lewens
van vroue. HIV/VIGS is ook een van die grootste bedreigings en gevare vir mense wat in
armoede leef en geen toegang het tot voldoende onderrig en onafhanklikheid in
verhoudings nie. Vroue word weereens die meeste geimpakteer. In die eerste hoofstuk sal
ek hierdie verhouding tussen armoede en HIV/VIGS bespreek sowel as tussen HIV/AIDS
en die status van vroue in Suid-Afrika. In die tweede hoofstuk wil ek die boek aangaande
’n feministiese ekklesiologie deur die katolieke feministiese teoloog Elizabeth A. Johnson
bespreek. In die derde hoofstuk wil ek hierdie feministiese ekklesiologie van herinnering
en hoop gebruik en dit toepas op die konteks van Suid-Afrika. In die laaste hoofstuk wil ek
'n raamwerk oor die effek wat hierdie feministiese ekklesiologie van herinnering en hoop
op die Suid-Afrikaanse gemeenskap kan hê, weergee.
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Recomposição da vida religiosa: Estudo das relações entre indivíduo e comunidade em congregações femininasGarcia, Martina Maria Eudosia Gonzáles 08 November 2006 (has links)
Made available in DSpace on 2016-04-25T19:20:44Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1
CRE - Martina Maria E G Garcia.pdf: 1010964 bytes, checksum: 405aa9a401e10d266ef853ac6c1b8e40 (MD5)
Previous issue date: 2006-11-08 / Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior / Women religious congregations experience a re-composition in the context of the
contemporary modernity, establishing new sociable links between the individual and the
forms of life and common action. This re-composition process is introduced due to the
emergence of the individualism exists in the Women Religious Life.
Institutional mechanisms lose legitimation power on the members while these enlarge
the margin of freedom and autonomy. This context allows to build more equalitarian
relationships, opens space for the difference and the plurality where women are more attentive
to their subjectivity and needs. The relationships are elaborated from the individual
experience and the subjects of the group who interact to each other, so as to broaden the
society to form a sense and action.
A dialectic accompanies this process in formation and the constant effort makes the
building up of communities possible who try to establish a balance between the individual
accomplishment and the common commitment through co-operation, dialogue and by
overcoming of conflicts.
This work discourses by the relationships that establishes between individual and
community in areas of power, action and daily religious living / Congregações religiosas femininas experimentam uma recomposição no contexto da
modernidade contemporânea mediante a emergência do individualismo. Estabelece-se novas
teias de sociabilidade entre o indivíduo e as formas de vida e de ação comuns.
Mecanismos institucionais perdem poder de legitimação sobre os membros enquanto
estes ampliam a margem de liberdade e autonomia. Esse contexto permite a construção de
relações mais igualitárias, abre espaço para a diferença e a pluralidade onde mulheres estão
mais atentas a subjetividade e as necessidades próprias. As relações são elaboradas a partir da
experiência individual e grupal dos sujeitos que interagem entre si e com a sociedade a fim de
construir o sentido e a ação.
Uma dialética acompanha este processo em formação e o constante esforço torna
possível a construção de comunidades que procuram estabelecer um equilíbrio entre a
realização individual e o compromisso comum mediante cooperação, diálogo e superação de
conflitos.
Este trabalho discorre sobre as relações que se estabelecem entre indivíduo e
comunidade em áreas de poder, ação, cotidiano e vivência religiosa
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道敎女仙傳記《墉城集仙錄》硏究. / On Yongcheng ji xian lu: a collection of Taoist female immortals' biographies / CUHK electronic theses & dissertations collection / Digital dissertation consortium / Dao jiao nü xian zhuan ji "Yongcheng ji xian lu" yan jiu.January 2000 (has links)
楊莉. / 論文(博士)--香港中文大學, 2000. / 參考文獻 (p. 138-142) / 中英文摘要. / Available also through the Internet via Dissertations & theses @ Chinese University of Hong Kong. / Electronic reproduction. Hong Kong : Chinese University of Hong Kong, [2012] System requirements: Adobe Acrobat Reader. Available via World Wide Web. / Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, MI : ProQuest Information and Learning Company, [200-] System requirements: Adobe Acrobat Reader. Available via World Wide Web. / Mode of access: World Wide Web. / Yang Li. / Lun wen (bo shi)--Xianggang Zhong wen da xue, 2000. / Can kao wen xian (p. 138-142) / Zhong Ying wen zhai yao.
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Women's religious speech and activism in German PietismMartin, Lucinda 09 June 2011 (has links)
Not available / text
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