The pilgrimage to the living mountains: representationalism, animism, and the Maya

IF 1.3 0 RELIGION Religion State & Society Pub Date : 2022-03-15 DOI:10.1080/09637494.2022.2054265
John Kapusta
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

ABSTRACT In this contribution, I provide an ethnography of the Maya New Year’s pilgrimage and sacrifice ritual, in which a delicate relatedness between people and animate mountains is established, enacted, and expressed. Far from the body–spirit, object–subject, and nature–culture dualities, these mountains appear to be bodily-souled and immanent-transcendent beings that participate, together with people, in the ongoing process of shaping a single shared world. The pilgrimage, therefore, is a route along which a larger than human community is being formed and along which the world – in all its contingency, fragility, and precariousness – is continuously brought into existence. This existentially animist cosmology situates humans and nonhumans within the-world-in-formation, rather than the-world-in-representation of some pre-existent cultural and political contents. Finally, I discuss some of the recent attempts to challenge representationalist approaches in Maya studies, arguing that they have escaped the tenets of representationalism just to fall into the trap of western alternative spirituality.
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朝圣的生活山:代表性,万物有灵论,和玛雅
在这篇文章中,我提供了玛雅新年朝圣和祭祀仪式的民族志,其中人与有生命的山脉之间建立,制定和表达了微妙的关系。远离身体-精神、客体-主体和自然-文化的二元性,这些山脉似乎是身体-灵魂和内在-超越的存在,与人一起参与塑造一个单一的共享世界的持续过程。因此,朝圣之旅是一条比人类更大的社会形成的道路,也是一个充满偶然性、脆弱性和不稳定性的世界不断出现的道路。这种存在万物有灵论的宇宙论将人类和非人类置于世界信息之中,而不是将世界置于一些预先存在的文化和政治内容的表征之中。最后,我讨论了最近一些试图挑战玛雅研究中代表主义方法的尝试,认为他们已经逃避了代表主义的原则,只是陷入了西方另类灵性的陷阱。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.90
自引率
10.00%
发文量
28
期刊介绍: Religion, State & Society has a long-established reputation as the leading English-language academic publication focusing on communist and formerly communist countries throughout the world, and the legacy of the encounter between religion and communism. To augment this brief Religion, State & Society has now expanded its coverage to include religious developments in countries which have not experienced communist rule, and to treat wider themes in a more systematic way. The journal encourages a comparative approach where appropriate, with the aim of revealing similarities and differences in the historical and current experience of countries, regions and religions, in stability or in transition.
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