From Fanatics to Folk Brazilian Millenarianism and Popular Culture
From Fanatics to Folk rejects conventional understandings of Brazilian millenarianism as exceptional and self-defeating. Considering millenarianism over the long sweep of Brazilian history, Patricia R. Pessar shows it to have been both dominant discourse and popular culture-at different times the in...
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[2004]
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520 | |a From Fanatics to Folk rejects conventional understandings of Brazilian millenarianism as exceptional and self-defeating. Considering millenarianism over the long sweep of Brazilian history, Patricia R. Pessar shows it to have been both dominant discourse and popular culture-at different times the inspiration for colonial conquest, for backlanders' resistance to a modernizing church and state, and for the nostalgic appropriation by today's elites in pursuit of "traditional" folklore and "authentic" expressions of faith. Pessar focuses on Santa Brígida, a Northeast Brazilian millenarian movement begun in the 1930s. She examines the movement from its founding by Pedro Batista-initially disparaged as a charlatan by the backland elite and later celebrated as a modernizer, patriot, and benefactor-through the contemporary struggles of its followers to maintain their transgressive religious beliefs in the face of increased attention from politicians, clergy, journalists, filmmakers, researchers, and museum curators.Pessar combines cultural history spanning the colonial period to the present; comparative case studies of the Canudos, Contestado, Juazeiro, and Santa Brígida movements; and three decades of ethnographic research in the Brazilian Northeast. Highlighting the involvement of a broad range of individuals and institutions, the cross-fertilization between movements, contestation and accommodation vis-à-vis the church and state, and matters of spirituality and faith, From Fanatics to Folk reveals Brazilian millenarianism as long-enduring and constantly in flux | ||
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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author | Pessar, Patricia R. |
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institution | BVB |
isbn | 9780822385653 |
language | English |
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physical | 1 online resource (288 pages) 27 b&w photos, 2 maps |
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publishDate | 2004 |
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publisher | Duke University Press |
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spelling | Pessar, Patricia R. Verfasser aut From Fanatics to Folk Brazilian Millenarianism and Popular Culture Patricia R. Pessar Durham Duke University Press [2004] © 2004 1 online resource (288 pages) 27 b&w photos, 2 maps txt rdacontent c rdamedia cr rdacarrier Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 12. Dez 2020) From Fanatics to Folk rejects conventional understandings of Brazilian millenarianism as exceptional and self-defeating. Considering millenarianism over the long sweep of Brazilian history, Patricia R. Pessar shows it to have been both dominant discourse and popular culture-at different times the inspiration for colonial conquest, for backlanders' resistance to a modernizing church and state, and for the nostalgic appropriation by today's elites in pursuit of "traditional" folklore and "authentic" expressions of faith. Pessar focuses on Santa Brígida, a Northeast Brazilian millenarian movement begun in the 1930s. She examines the movement from its founding by Pedro Batista-initially disparaged as a charlatan by the backland elite and later celebrated as a modernizer, patriot, and benefactor-through the contemporary struggles of its followers to maintain their transgressive religious beliefs in the face of increased attention from politicians, clergy, journalists, filmmakers, researchers, and museum curators.Pessar combines cultural history spanning the colonial period to the present; comparative case studies of the Canudos, Contestado, Juazeiro, and Santa Brígida movements; and three decades of ethnographic research in the Brazilian Northeast. Highlighting the involvement of a broad range of individuals and institutions, the cross-fertilization between movements, contestation and accommodation vis-à-vis the church and state, and matters of spirituality and faith, From Fanatics to Folk reveals Brazilian millenarianism as long-enduring and constantly in flux In English RELIGION / Christianity / History bisacsh Millennialism Brazil History 19th century Millennialism Brazil History 20th century https://doi.org/10.1515/9780822385653 Verlag URL des Erstveröffentlichers Volltext |
spellingShingle | Pessar, Patricia R. From Fanatics to Folk Brazilian Millenarianism and Popular Culture RELIGION / Christianity / History bisacsh Millennialism Brazil History 19th century Millennialism Brazil History 20th century |
title | From Fanatics to Folk Brazilian Millenarianism and Popular Culture |
title_auth | From Fanatics to Folk Brazilian Millenarianism and Popular Culture |
title_exact_search | From Fanatics to Folk Brazilian Millenarianism and Popular Culture |
title_full | From Fanatics to Folk Brazilian Millenarianism and Popular Culture Patricia R. Pessar |
title_fullStr | From Fanatics to Folk Brazilian Millenarianism and Popular Culture Patricia R. Pessar |
title_full_unstemmed | From Fanatics to Folk Brazilian Millenarianism and Popular Culture Patricia R. Pessar |
title_short | From Fanatics to Folk |
title_sort | from fanatics to folk brazilian millenarianism and popular culture |
title_sub | Brazilian Millenarianism and Popular Culture |
topic | RELIGION / Christianity / History bisacsh Millennialism Brazil History 19th century Millennialism Brazil History 20th century |
topic_facet | RELIGION / Christianity / History Millennialism Brazil History 19th century Millennialism Brazil History 20th century |
url | https://doi.org/10.1515/9780822385653 |
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