Incorporating spirit

ritual possession in Brazilian Umbanda

Authors

  • Emma Francis Stone Auckland University of Technology

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/bar.29112

Keywords:

religion, body, ritual possession, Umbanda, Brazilian religions, embodiment, socio-functionalism

Abstract

The barrier that separates the spiritual and earthly worlds is paper thin in Brazil. The infusion of the spiritual into the secular manifests in diverse ways, but is perhaps best represented by the prevalence of ritual possession in the region, where the spiritual and material merge. This paper will focus on the phenomenon of ritual possession within Umbanda, an eclectic Afro-Brazilian spiritual tradition. It will first explore existing sociological and socio-functionalist analyses or ritual possession in Brazil, and then argue that there is a need for an analysis that makes sense of possession from an embodied perspective. Drawing on the testimonies of mediums from two Umbanda centers in Rio de Janeiro (the Casa da Caridade Caboclo Peri) and Sao Paulo (Templo Guaracy) in Brazil, the article will investigate the appeal of ritual possession as a spiritual practice located and experienced in the body.

Author Biography

  • Emma Francis Stone, Auckland University of Technology

    Dr Emma Stone resides in Auckland, New Zealand and lectures in sociology at AUT University. Her PhD research examined contemporary expressions of Brazilian religiosity in the age of neo-liberalism. Her research interests include Afro-Brazilian religions, embodiment and religion, and spiritual healing.

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Published

2017-12-22

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Stone, E. F. (2017). Incorporating spirit: ritual possession in Brazilian Umbanda. Body and Religion, 1(2), 185-206. https://doi.org/10.1558/bar.29112