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Reassembling Democracy
Ritual as Cultural Resource
By Graham Harvey (Edited by), Michael Houseman (Edited by), Sarah M. Pike (Edited by), Jone Salomonsen (Edited by)

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Format
Hardback, 264 pages
Published
United Kingdom, 8 December 2019

This open access book is the result of collaborations between international researchers who have focused on diverse processes of democratic participation—and exclusion—that are intimately involved with ritual acts and complexes. The main question integrating the collection concerns the ways in which the performative qualities of ritual resources achieve their potential as forms of personal and political empowerment in our changing world. The authors seek to define the key terms “ritual” and “democracy” with reference to fieldwork-informed case studies from selected communities. They critically address democracy as a concept in a time of climate crisis, nationalism, religious re-traditionalizing, fake news and aspirational fascism. Furthermore, they discuss ways in which ritualized practices such as memorial gatherings, festivals, protest actions, pilgrimages and worship services give rise to modes of feeling, processes of representation, and patterns of interaction in which democratic explorations are given pride of place. The eBook editions of this book are available open access under a CC BY-NC-ND license on www.bloomsburycollections.com. Open access was funded by Knowledge Unlatched.


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Product Description

This open access book is the result of collaborations between international researchers who have focused on diverse processes of democratic participation—and exclusion—that are intimately involved with ritual acts and complexes. The main question integrating the collection concerns the ways in which the performative qualities of ritual resources achieve their potential as forms of personal and political empowerment in our changing world. The authors seek to define the key terms “ritual” and “democracy” with reference to fieldwork-informed case studies from selected communities. They critically address democracy as a concept in a time of climate crisis, nationalism, religious re-traditionalizing, fake news and aspirational fascism. Furthermore, they discuss ways in which ritualized practices such as memorial gatherings, festivals, protest actions, pilgrimages and worship services give rise to modes of feeling, processes of representation, and patterns of interaction in which democratic explorations are given pride of place. The eBook editions of this book are available open access under a CC BY-NC-ND license on www.bloomsburycollections.com. Open access was funded by Knowledge Unlatched.

Product Details
EAN
9781350123014
ISBN
1350123013
Dimensions
23.4 x 15.6 x 1.6 centimeters (0.33 kg)

Table of Contents

0. “Introduction”, Graham Harvey, Michael Houseman, Sarah Pike and Jone Salomonsen Part One: Ritual and Democracy 1. “Improvising ritual”, Ronald L. Grimes 2. “Hospitable democracy: Democracy and hospitality in times of crisis”, Agnes Czajka Part Two: Re-assembling communities 3. “Enchanting democracy: Facing the past in Mongolian shamanic rituals”, Gregory Delaplace 4. “Indigenous rituals re-make the larger than human community”, Graham Harvey 5. “Becoming autonomous together: Distanced intimacy in dances of self-discovery”, Michael Houseman 6. “Walking pilgrimages to the Marian shrine of Fátima in Portugal as democratic explorations”, Anna Fedele 7. “The interreligious Choir of Civilizations: Politics of religious representation and ritual identity in Antakya (Antioch), Turkey”, Jens Kreinath Part Three: Commemoration and resistance 8. “The ritual powers of the weak: Democracy and public responses to the 22 July 2011 terrorist attacks on Norway”, Jone Salomonsen 9. “The Flower actions: Interreligious funerals after the Utøya massacre”, Ida Marie Høeg 10. “Dealing with death in contemporary Western culture: A view from afar”, Marika Moisseeff 11. “Reinvented rituals as medicine in contemporary Indigenous films: Maligluitt, Mahana, and Goldstone”, Ken Derry

Promotional Information

Explores diverse ritual practices and events in relation to democratic processes including participation, resistance and/or involvement with the larger than human world.

About the Author

Jone Salomonsen is Professor ofTheology at the University of Oslo, Norway. Michael Houseman is Professor in the Religious Studies section, Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes, Paris, France. Sarah M. Pike is Professor of Comparative Religion and Humanities, California State University, Chico, USA. Graham Harvey is Professor of Religious Studies at The Open University, UK. The editors have significant publication lists and their interests span the study of religion(s), ritual, ecology, performance, indigeneity and contemporary social movements.

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