Every human being is born and has gone through a process of birth. Yet
the topic of birth remains deeply underrepresented in the humanities,
overshadowed by a scholarly focus on death. This book explores how
imagery is used ritualistically in religious, secular, and
nonreligious ways during birth, through analysis of a wide variety of
art, iconography, poetry, and material culture. Objects central to the
book’s study include religious figurines, paintings about birth, and
other items representative of pregnancy, crowning, or giving birth
that have an historical or original meaning connected to religion.
Contemporary artists are also creating new art in which they represent
birth and mothering as nonreligious events that are sacred or divine.
Framed through the concept of social ontology, which examines the
nature of the social world and studies how people create meaning out
of the various objects, images, and processes that make up human
social life, the book theorizes a social ontology of birth, focusing
on how the meaning of imagery undergoes metamorphosis between the
spheres of religion, secularity, nonreligion, and the sacred when used
during birth as a rite of passage. Included in the study are more than
thirty images of birth, some of which have never been written about
before.
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Ontology between the Sacred and the Secular
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781498548748
Publisert
2018
Utgiver
Vendor
Lexington Books
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter