巴西的非洲宗教

L. N. Parés
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引用次数: 0

摘要

尽管政治和文化背景各不相同,但西非人和西非中部人有一些共同的基本宗教取向。他们非常注重解决现实世界的问题,宗教活动的活力和灵活性对于他们在巴西奴隶社会中迅速恢复活力至关重要。然而,大西洋的转移剥夺了非洲机构的结构性社会基础,因此需要一个复杂的重新制度化的创新过程,以允许出现新形式的非洲-巴西宗教。仪式联想主义最早出现在殖民地卡伦杜,主要涉及人际治疗和占卜互动,但很快就形成了平行的宗教集会,灵感来自于一种基于初始招募新手和崇拜多神的教会组织模式。尽管有治疗、占卜、祭祀、灵魂占有、启蒙和庆祝等共同的元素,但巴西黑人宗教的起源却以惊人的多元化和折衷主义为特征,导致了广泛的地区差异。每个地方被奴役的人口和文化特点,以及当地的历史环境,决定了不同的非洲传统之间的创造性合成过程,以及这些传统与霸权的伊比利亚天主教、美洲印第安人的治疗实践和其他传统之间的合成过程。在大西洋奴隶贸易结束后,思想和牧师在全国范围内以及非洲和巴西之间的传播也促进了19世纪非洲-巴西宗教领域的巩固。尽管历史上一直存在歧视和迫害,偶尔也会有选择性的宽容,但非裔巴西人的宗教为非洲价值观、行为和社交形式的变革再现提供了一个独特的空间,这对巴西民族文化产生了持久的影响。寺庙争取合法性和认可的斗争表现在一种潜在的紧张关系中,一种是声称所谓的非洲仪式的纯洁性,另一种是被指责为融合主义,学者们对这种分歧做出了很大贡献,并为他们的分类努力提供了方向。
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African Religions in Brazil
Despite their diverse political and cultural backgrounds, West Africans and West Central Africans shared some basic religious orientations. With a strong pragmatic focus on solving problems in this world, the dynamism and flexibility of their religious practices were critical for their quick reactivation within Brazilian slave society. The Atlantic transfer, however, deprived African institutions of their structural social basis so a complex innovative process of re-institutionalization was necessary to allow new forms of Afro-Brazilian religions to emerge. Ritual associativism first occurred around the colonial Calundu, mostly concerned with interpersonal healing and divination interactions, but rapidly saw the formation of parallel religious congregations inspired by an ecclesiastical mode of organization based on the initiatory recruitment of novices and the worship of multiple deities. Despite common elements of healing, divination, sacrifice, spirit possession, initiation, and celebration, the genesis of Afro-Brazilian religions was marked by astounding pluralism and eclecticism that led to a wide range of regional variation. The demographics and cultural specificities of the enslaved in each place, as well as local historical circumstances, determined distinct processes of creative synthesis among the various African traditions and between these and hegemonic Iberian Catholicism, Amerindian healing practices, and others. The circulation of ideas and priests across the country and between Africa and Brazil after the end of the Atlantic slave trade also added to the 19th-century consolidation of an Afro-Brazilian religious field. Despite a history of continuous discrimination and persecution, alongside occasional selective tolerance, Afro-Brazilian religions offered a unique space for the transformative reproduction of African values, behaviors, and forms of sociability, which had a long-lasting effect on Brazilian national culture. The temples’ struggles for legitimacy and recognition was expressed in a latent tension between those which claimed an alleged African ritual purity and those accused of syncretism, a divide to which scholars greatly contributed to and which has oriented their classificatory efforts.
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