Birth and Death: Studying Ritual, Embodied Practices and Spirituality at the Start and End of Life
A special issue of Religions (ISSN 2077-1444). This special issue belongs to the section "Religions and Health/Psychology/Social Sciences".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (22 November 2021) | Viewed by 70729
Special Issue Editors
Interests: ritual; meaning making; spirituality; birth; death; spiritual care; secular; humanist chaplaincy
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Birth and death are fundamental human experiences. Both life-transitions are meaningful and profound but can also lead to ambiguous feelings, negotiated in embodied, cultural, spiritual and symbolic practices (Hallam et al., 1999; Kaufman and Morgan, 2005; Mathijssen, 2018; Wojtkowiak, 2020). The study of birth and death as existential transitions, comparing and contrasting these two life-events from a ritual and embodied perspective, can reveal novel insights into spirituality and religiosity. In this Special Issue of Religions, we want to unravel these questions and explore new theoretical and empirical research on birth and death from multidisciplinary perspectives, such as cultural anthropology, religious studies, chaplaincy studies, medical and cultural psychology and psychology of religion and related disciplines.
The importance of studying birth and death from an embodied, ritualized and symbolic perspective relates to several observations. First of all, all humans are related to their own birth and death and often involved in the birth and death of others (Hennessey, 2019; Schües, 2008). However, entering the world, as well as saying farewell to loved ones, is not a linear transition. Liminal and ambiguous meanings accompany pregnancy and birth, as well as death and dying. Cultural, spiritual and ritual practices accompany this transition and accommodate possible ambiguous states. Secondly, both life transitions are related to spiritual and existential questioning, revealing what matters to us (Wojtkowiak and Crowther, 2018). Thirdly, rituals and embodied practices—varying from quotidian storytelling, performances, meditation and beautification practices to initiation rites and funerals—are grounded in the body, the senses and material culture. Gaining insights into the significance of embodiment, the physical and material dimension of spirituality has been underdeveloped in the literature (McGuire 2006). Fourthly, because of changing religious and cultural contexts, such as secularization, medicalization, migration and globalization, the way we frame and give meaning to birth and death are changing and leading to pluralistic and possibly conflicting meaning frames. Rituals at the start and end of life have also been changing (Grimes, 2002). What kind of challenges do we face in changing birth and death contexts? What can we learn about meaning making and spirituality by studying birth and death rituals? How is embodied spirituality negotiated in birth and death rituals and practices?
We invite scholars from different fields to submit papers on the following topics:
- Rituals and ritualization of birth and/or death (such as pregnancy and birth, dying, death and mourning, commemoration, memorials, private, individual ritualizing);
- Embodied spirituality at birth and/or death from theoretical and empirical perspectives (such as midwifery, chaplaincy or personal practices);
- Social and cultural meanings and ambiguity surrounding personhood at birth or death from an embodied, ritualized perspective (when do we become a person/social being? And how is this manifested in embodied practices? See, for instance, Kaufman and Morgan, 2005);
- Philosophical perspectives on ritual at birth and death (e.g., phenomenological approaches to ritualizing pregnancy, birth, death and dying).
References
Grimes, Ronald. L. 2002. Deeply into the bone: Re-inventing rites of passage. Berkeley: University of California Press.
Hallam, Elizabeth, Jenny Hockey, and Glennys Howarth. 1999. Beyond the Body: Death and Social Identity. Abingdon: Routledge.
Hennessey, Anna. M. 2019. Imagery, ritual and birth: Ontology betwen the sacred and the secular. Lanham: Lexington Books.
Kaufman, Sharon R., and Lynn. M. Morgan. 2005. The Anthropology of the Beginnings and Ends of Life. Annual Review of Anthropology 34: 317–41.
Mathijssen, Brenda. 2018. Transforming bonds: Ritualising post-mortem relationships in the Netherlands. Mortality 23: 215–30. https://doi.org/10.1080/13576275.2017.1364228
Schües, Christina. 2008. Philisophie des Geborenseins. Freiburg im Breisgau: Verlag Karl Alber.
Wojtkowiak, Joanna, and Susan Crowther. 2018. An existential and spiritual discussion about childbirth: Contrasting spirituality at the beginning and end of life. Spirituality in Clinical Practice 5: 261–72. https://doi.org/10.1037/scp0000188
Wojtkowiak, Joanna. 2020. Ritualizing pregnancy and childbirth in secular societies: Exploring embodied spirituality at the start of life. Religions 11: 1–16. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel11090458
Dr. Joanna Wojtkowiak
Dr. Brenda Mathijssen
Guest Editors
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Keywords
- ritual
- ritualization
- birth
- death
- spirituality
- symbolic
- embodiment
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