Touchable Gods

Improvised Icons, Irreverent Rituals and Intimate Kinship with Deities in Rural Tamil Nadu

Authors

  • Indira Arumugam National University of Singapore Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/rosa.19311

Keywords:

Folk Hinduism, Intimacy, Irreverence, Material Religion, Tutelary Deities, Village Rituals

Abstract

Village and tutelary deities have been characterized as fierce, capricious, or at least ambiguous. This article explores another facet of these polysemous divinities: their kinship with their adherents. Against the thrust of recent emphases on the gentrification of rural cults, the interventions of ritual specialists and the establishing of distance between deities and laity, these gods remain messily tactile and persist in being directly touchable. Villagers make their gods themselves with profane materials and through routine actions; enact rituals to them unmediated by priests, marked by informality and tinged with irreverence; and relate to them through instrumentalist but loving interactions. From the mundane acts and exegetic narratives through which devotees make sense of and organize their religious experiences, I materialize a local theology that articulates the nature of these gods and how they become present and active in human social worlds. Privileging co-residence, substantive congruence with, and ethical obligations between, villagers and their tutelaries, this theology presumes kinship with their gods. Taking these gods for granted, only intermittently worshipping them, and even neglecting sacrificial obligations, denotes profound intimacy between them and their devotees. Sublimity and intimacy are simultaneously part of the productive ambiguities that underpin the charisma of this sacred.

Author Biography

  • Indira Arumugam, National University of Singapore

    Indira Arumugam is an Assistant Professor in the National University of Singapore. An anthropologist working primarily in Tamil Nadu, she is interested in rituals, lived kinship, popular politics and grassroots Hinduism. Her articles on pleasurable kinship, animal sacrifice, gift politics and festival ethics have been published in Social Anthropology, Modern Asian Studies, Contributions to Indian Sociology and Material Religion respectively. Her monograph Visceral Politics: Intimate Imaginaries of Power in South India is forthcoming.

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Published

2021-02-16

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Arumugam, I. (2021). Touchable Gods: Improvised Icons, Irreverent Rituals and Intimate Kinship with Deities in Rural Tamil Nadu. Religions of South Asia, 13(2), 230–251. https://doi.org/10.1558/rosa.19311

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