
In the early 1980s, in a rural village in South India, a Dalit woman miscarried. She hovered on the edge of death--until the Virgin Mary led her to a chapel and possessed her. For years, hundreds of ailing Catholics and Hindus came to this woman for healing, and Mary made them well. Two decades later, in the metropolis of Chennai, a boy named Alex lay in his hospital bed sick with fever when the Virgin Mary appeared to him and told him to walk. He did--and at home, he felt Mary enter his body. Soon, his older cousin Rosalind also showed signs of Marian possession. Mary told them that her name was Jecintho. Within three years, another young woman in Chennai also became possessed by Jecintho and began exhibiting signs of stigmata: blood flowing from her hands and eyes. Possessed by the Virgin is an ethnographic account of Marian possession, healing, and exorcism among Catholics and Hindus in Southeast India. Following the lives of three Tamil Roman Catholic women for more than a decade, Kristin C. Bloomer attends to the women's own descriptions of their experience with Marian possession, as well as to those of the people who came to them for healing. Her book investigates how possession is possible and in what contexts such experiences can be read as authentic. Roman Catholic officials have responded in various ways: banning certain activities while promoting others. Their responses reflect the complicated relationship of the Roman Catholic Church with non-Christian religious practices on the Indian subcontinent, where possession (a term introduced by missionaries) involving deities and spirits has long been commonplace and where gods, goddesses and spirits have long inhabited people. This ground sets the stage for Bloomer to explore questions of agency, gender, subjectivity, and power, and the complex interconnection between the ethnographic self and the other.
This book investigates the phenomenon of Marian possession in South India, questioning how such experiences are constructed, perceived, and validated within the complex intersection of Roman Catholicism and local religious traditions. Kristin C. Bloomer, an associate professor of religion, utilizes over a decade of ethnographic fieldwork to document the lives of Tamil women who claim to be possessed by the Virgin Mary. Her work examines the interplay between individual agency, gendered subjectivity, and the institutional power dynamics of the Catholic Church in the Indian subcontinent.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars in the field of religious studies highlight this work as a nuanced contribution to the anthropology of Christianity and the study of gendered religious experience. Readers frequently note the academic rigor of the text and its ability to balance the personal narratives of the subjects with broader sociological analysis.
Page Count:
320
Publication Date:
2017-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190615109
ISBN-13:
9780190615109
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