Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Santería grand slam: Afro-Cuban religious studies and the study of Afro-Cuban religion

View through CrossRef
[First paragraph]Living Santería: Rituals and Experiences in an Afro-Cuban Religion. MICHAEL ATWOOD MASON. Washington DC: Smithsonian Institution Press, 2002. ix + 165 pp. (Paper US$ 16.95)Divine Utterances: The Performance of Afro-Cuban Santería. KATHERINE J. HAGEDORN. Washington DC: Smithsonian Institution Press, 2001. xvi + 296 pp. (Cloth US$ 40.00)The Light Inside: Abakuá Society Arts and Cuban Cultural History. DAVID H. BROWN. Washington DC: Smithsonian Institution Press, 2003. xix + 286 pp. (Cloth US$ 44.23)Santería Enthroned: Art, Ritual, and Innovation in an Afro-Cuban Religion. DAVID H. BROWN. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 2003. xx + 413 pp. (Paper US$ 38.00)Ethnographic objects behave in curious ways. Although they clearly are “our constructions,” field sites and even topically circumscribed (rather than spatially delimited) ethnographic problems lead double lives: places and problems change not merely because they factually undergo historical changes, but because researchers come to them from historically no less changeable epistemic vantage points. One can imagine generational cohorts of ethnographers marching across the same geographically or thematically defined terrain and seeing different things – not just because of substantial changes that have factually occurred, but because they have come to ask different questions. The process obviously has its dialectical moments. The figures we inscribe in writing from fleeting observations (based on changing theoretical conceptions) are no less subject to history than the empirical grounds from which our discursive efforts call them forth. The result is a curious imbrication of partially autonomous, but also partly overlapping, historicities of lives and texts which, at times, are more difficult to keep apart than it would seem at first glance. At least in the study of Afro-Cuban religious culture, the two practical and discursive fields – one circumscribed by the practical, but perhaps misleading label “Afro-Cuban religion,”1 and the other designated by whatever term one might like to affix to the study of it – cannot be easily separated: much as in the Brazilian case (Braga 1995, Capone 1999, Matory 1999, 2001), practitioners of Afro-Cuban religions and their ethnographers have engaged each other in a dialogue since at least the second decade of the twentieth century. That it took us so long to understand this fact has much to do with the way both “Afro-Cuban religion” and “Afro-Cuban ethnography” originally (and lastingly) became discursively objectified: the former largely under the sign of a search for “authentically African” elements in New World cultural practices, the second as an instrument for “verifying” (and thereby authorizing) such “Africanisms” (Scott 1991).
Title: Santería grand slam: Afro-Cuban religious studies and the study of Afro-Cuban religion
Description:
[First paragraph]Living Santería: Rituals and Experiences in an Afro-Cuban Religion.
MICHAEL ATWOOD MASON.
Washington DC: Smithsonian Institution Press, 2002.
ix + 165 pp.
(Paper US$ 16.
95)Divine Utterances: The Performance of Afro-Cuban Santería.
KATHERINE J.
HAGEDORN.
Washington DC: Smithsonian Institution Press, 2001.
xvi + 296 pp.
(Cloth US$ 40.
00)The Light Inside: Abakuá Society Arts and Cuban Cultural History.
DAVID H.
BROWN.
Washington DC: Smithsonian Institution Press, 2003.
xix + 286 pp.
(Cloth US$ 44.
23)Santería Enthroned: Art, Ritual, and Innovation in an Afro-Cuban Religion.
DAVID H.
BROWN.
Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 2003.
xx + 413 pp.
(Paper US$ 38.
00)Ethnographic objects behave in curious ways.
Although they clearly are “our constructions,” field sites and even topically circumscribed (rather than spatially delimited) ethnographic problems lead double lives: places and problems change not merely because they factually undergo historical changes, but because researchers come to them from historically no less changeable epistemic vantage points.
One can imagine generational cohorts of ethnographers marching across the same geographically or thematically defined terrain and seeing different things – not just because of substantial changes that have factually occurred, but because they have come to ask different questions.
The process obviously has its dialectical moments.
The figures we inscribe in writing from fleeting observations (based on changing theoretical conceptions) are no less subject to history than the empirical grounds from which our discursive efforts call them forth.
The result is a curious imbrication of partially autonomous, but also partly overlapping, historicities of lives and texts which, at times, are more difficult to keep apart than it would seem at first glance.
At least in the study of Afro-Cuban religious culture, the two practical and discursive fields – one circumscribed by the practical, but perhaps misleading label “Afro-Cuban religion,”1 and the other designated by whatever term one might like to affix to the study of it – cannot be easily separated: much as in the Brazilian case (Braga 1995, Capone 1999, Matory 1999, 2001), practitioners of Afro-Cuban religions and their ethnographers have engaged each other in a dialogue since at least the second decade of the twentieth century.
That it took us so long to understand this fact has much to do with the way both “Afro-Cuban religion” and “Afro-Cuban ethnography” originally (and lastingly) became discursively objectified: the former largely under the sign of a search for “authentically African” elements in New World cultural practices, the second as an instrument for “verifying” (and thereby authorizing) such “Africanisms” (Scott 1991).

Related Results

Santería grand slam: Afro-Cuban religious studies and the study of Afro-Cuban religion
Santería grand slam: Afro-Cuban religious studies and the study of Afro-Cuban religion
[First paragraph]Living Santería: Rituals and Experiences in an Afro-Cuban Religion. MICHAEL ATWOOD MASON. Washington DC: Smithsonian Institution Press, 2002. ix + 165 pp. (Paper U...
A survey: which features are required for dynamic visual simultaneous localization and mapping?
A survey: which features are required for dynamic visual simultaneous localization and mapping?
AbstractIn recent years, simultaneous localization and mapping in dynamic environments (dynamic SLAM) has attracted significant attention from both academia and industry. Some pion...
The Theory of Religion and Method in the Study of Religion in the Encyclopedia of Religion
The Theory of Religion and Method in the Study of Religion in the Encyclopedia of Religion
In this review of articles in the Encyclopedia of Religion I have selected those concerning theoretical issues about the nature of religion and those describing the history and met...
Freemasonry and the Occult at the Court of Peter the Great
Freemasonry and the Occult at the Court of Peter the Great
AbstractThe reign of Peter the Great is regarded as one of the most significant and contentious epochs in Russian history. It has been customary to view the reforms of the period a...
The lived religion approach in the sociology of religion and its implications for secular feminist analyses of religion
The lived religion approach in the sociology of religion and its implications for secular feminist analyses of religion
The sociological ‘lived religion’ approach focuses on the experiences of religious individuals in everyday life, whilst also considering the institutional aspects of religion that ...
Sensing religion, observing religion, reconstructing religion: Contingency and pluralization in post-Westphalian context
Sensing religion, observing religion, reconstructing religion: Contingency and pluralization in post-Westphalian context
The article argues that what is performed and understood as religion in global society has in the course of the modern centuries come to be increasingly dominated by the idea that ...
Religious Faith and Prometheus
Religious Faith and Prometheus
Recent philosophy of religion, particularly neo-Wittgensteinian philosophy of religion, has reminded philosophers that there is more to religion than belief and, indeed, that there...
Museums and Exhibitions: Overview and History
Museums and Exhibitions: Overview and History
Much of the art housed in Western museums is religious in nature—the result of how these museum collections were assembled and merged with differing displays over time. The origins...

Back to Top