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New Directions in Spiritual Kinship: Sacred Ties across the Abrahamic Religions PDF

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CONTEMPORARY ANTHROPOLOGY OF RELIGION New Directions in Spiritual Kinship Sacred Ties across the Abrahamic Religions EDITED BY TODNE THOMAS, ASIYA MALIK, ROSE WELLMAN Contemporary Anthropology of Religion Series Editors Don Seeman Department of Religion Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia, USA Tulasi Srinivas Department of Liberal Arts and Interdisciplinary Studies Emerson College, Boston, Massachusetts, USA Contemporary Anthropology of Religion is the official book series of the Society for the Anthropology of Religion, a section of the American Anthropological Association. Books in the series explore a variety of issues relating to current theoretical or comparative issues in the study of religion. These include the relation between religion and the body, social memory, gender, ethnoreligious violence, globalization, modernity, and multiculturalism, among others. Recent historical events have sug- gested that religion plays a central role in the contemporary world, and Contemporary Anthropology of Religion provides a crucial forum for the expansion of our understanding of religion globally. More information about this series at http://www.springer.com/series/14916 Todne Thomas • Asiya Malik • Rose Wellman Editors New Directions in Spiritual Kinship Sacred Ties across the Abrahamic Religions Editors Todne Thomas Asiya Malik Department of Religion Independent Researcher University of Vermont Toronto, Canada Burlington, Vermont, USA Rose Wellman The Sharmin and Bijan Mossavar- Rahmani Center for Iran and Persian Gulf Studies Princeton University Princeton, New Jersey, USA Contemporary Anthropology of Religion ISBN 978-3-319-48422-8 ISBN 978-3-319-48423-5 (eBook) DOI 10.1007/978-3-319-48423-5 Library of Congress Control Number: 2016963221 © The Editor(s) (if applicable) and The Author(s) 2017 This work is subject to copyright. All rights are solely and exclusively licensed by the Publisher, whether the whole or part of the material is concerned, specifically the rights of translation, reprinting, reuse of illustrations, recitation, broadcasting, reproduction on microfilms or in any other physical way, and transmission or information storage and retrieval, electronic adaptation, computer software, or by similar or dissimilar methodology now known or hereafter developed. The use of general descriptive names, registered names, trademarks, service marks, etc. in this publication does not imply, even in the absence of a specific statement, that such names are exempt from the relevant protective laws and regulations and therefore free for general use. The publisher, the authors and the editors are safe to assume that the advice and information in this book are believed to be true and accurate at the date of publication. Neither the pub- lisher nor the authors or the editors give a warranty, express or implied, with respect to the material contained herein or for any errors or omissions that may have been made. The publisher remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institu- tional affiliations. Cover illustration © robertharding / Alamy Stock Photo. Printed on acid-free paper This Palgrave Macmillan imprint is published by Springer Nature The registered company is Springer International Publishing AG The registered company address is: Gewerbestrasse 11, 6330 Cham, Switzerland To communitas and to Edie To our dear mentor Susie To sisterhoods of spirit And to the nourishing presence of our children P reface New Directions in Spiritual Kinship is a groundbreaking work. It is the first volume specifically dedicated to the comparative study of “spiritual” or “sacred” kinship—the first volume to explore ethnographically the richly diverse manifestations of sacred kinship and to articulate theoreti- cally the significance of these manifestations for our understanding of the architecture of human societies. And it is the first volume to bring recent advances in the anthropological study of kinship to bear on the study of religion to produce a highly innovative and exceptionally fruitful investi- gation of the dimensions and dynamics of an array of possible intersections between kinship and the sacred. From the perspective of anthropological studies of kinship, New Directions in Spiritual Kinship brings to light the critical importance of the sacred as a fundamental building block of kinship formations in its own right. Given that the theoretical framing of kinship as a domain of inquiry in anthropology was originally delimited by reference to biological relations and described in mostly secular terms (Schneider 1984; Cannell 2013), serious attention to the ways in which kinship can be created through processes of making spiritual and sacred relations is a significant advancement in kinship studies. Aside from Fustel de Coulanges—who, in The Ancient City (1980 [1874]), conceptualized kinship first and fore- most as a relation of shared worship and sacrifice regardless of biologi- cal relatedness—most anthropological theorists of kinship up until the 1980s understood biological relations to undergird the differing social manifestations of what counted as “real” kinship. The religious, sacred, or spiritual aspects of kinship were conceptualized in one of two main vii viii PREFACE ways. On the one hand, in such forms as ancestor worship, they were seen as cultural epiphenomena meant to reflect and reinforce the structure of the given social forms of otherwise biologically based kinship (e.g., Fortes and Evans-Pritchard 1940; Fortes 1969). On the other hand, relations of sacred or spiritual kinship that were conceived outside or alongside of “real” biological kinship relations were deemed to be “fictive”—less than “really real” and hardly capable of forming the infrastructural base of social relations. Either way, relations of sacred or spiritual kinship were understood as somehow derivative of and secondary to biological rela- tions, and they were rarely explored as fundamentally constitutive or primary. With the work that followed upon Schneider’s (1984) critique of Western presuppositions about the biological foundations of kinship as an analytic domain, scholars shifted their attention in two interrelated direc- tions. One led them to consider the ways in which kinship relations could be formed through other substances besides biological ones—such as shared food, land, hearths, and houses; the other led them to consider kinship as a process of doing—unfolding in the everyday practices such as care, nur- turance, feeding, exchange, labor, and choice (e.g., Carsten 1995, 1997; A. Strathern 1973; McKinnon 1991, in press; Schneider 1984; Weston 1991). It is significant that, while this theoretical shift allowed anthropol- ogists to consider a much wider range of what might count as kinship and how such kinship might be brought into being, the theoretical location of spiritual or sacred kinship as “fictive” remained largely unexamined. It is not that scholars of kinship studies did not integrate the sacred and spiri- tual aspects of kin-making into their accounts; rather it was that the status of the relation with the divine—as one of the possible grounds for kinship formations—was not fully repositioned and theorized. This is precisely what this volume seeks to accomplish. From the perspective of anthropological studies of religion, this vol- ume illuminates the critical importance of kinship to the formation of religious communities. It does so in several different ways. It explores how understandings about gendered contributions to life and identity inform conceptions of both cosmological creation and the human procre- ation. It examines how the lines of kinship and marriage—traced through bodily substances and human actions such as feeding—can become the pathways that link humans to the divine and divine blessing. And it inves- tigates how these divinely infused relations of kinship come to form the architecture that structures communities at and between various levels of PREFACE ix organization, from domestic families to congregations, nations, and trans- national communities. In exploring the intersections between kinship and the sacred, the chapters in New Directions in Spiritual Kinship consider a number of crosscutting themes; and they also reveal a tremendous diversity of ideas and practices within and across the three religions—Judaism, Christianity, and Islam—that are the focus of this volume. Although the comparative scope of the volume is limited to the Abrahamic religions, one neverthe- less suspects that many of the themes explored in this comparative context would also be relevant to a wider investigation of sacred kinship in other religions around the world. One of the primary comparative themes that became immediately evi- dent in the Wenner-Gren workshop from which this volume emanates is the distinction between the embodied as opposed to the transcendent nature of the relationships between kinship and spiritual/sacred connec- tions to the divine. Yet, even at the most embodied and transcendent ends of the spectrum, the material and spiritual are almost always complexly entangled with and capable of transforming one another. Whatever is per- ceived as given, divinely ordained, or natural is capable of being trans- formed—of being subject to the effects of both human and divine action, intention, and agency. Another significant theme revealed by the authors in this volume is the tension between the aspirational ideal of a universal, expansive, and inclu- sive sacred community, on the one hand, and the ways in which such ideals are contradicted by more exclusive and differentiated affiliations, on the other. While the former becomes manifest in more globally shared rituals, texts, and practices (such as those of the Muslim umma or the catholic church), the latter become evident through sectarian, ethnic, racial, and regional distinctions, as well as through transnational migrations, colonial legacies, and the trust borne of genealogical knowledge and/or shared life experiences. The chapters in this volume detail the ways in which people engage these complex histories, practices, and knowledges in their strug- gles to open up and/or delimit what they understand to be the space of religious sociality. Closely linked to this tension between the universal and the particular is the capacity of kinship (however defined) as a vehicle for both inclu- sion and exclusion, integration and disintegration, hierarchy and equality. Perhaps precisely due to its dynamic shifting significations of material and spiritual relatedness, kinship has the capacity to link and integrate sacred x PREFACE communities at various levels of organization: domestic, congregational, national, regional, and global. Yet if sacred kinship can form integrative structures that link different levels of organization, it can also form the scaffolding of inclusions and exclusions that define both internal and external social hierarchies (and equalities). Internally, it is the gendered aspects of sacred kinship that is perhaps the most notable line of hier- archical differentiation. Externally, both material and sacred genealogies demarcate the limits of community exclusion and inclusion. Finally, this volume also speaks to the enduring relevance of both kin- ship and religion in so-called modern societies. In narratives of social evo- lution and development, the assumption has long been that modernity is marked by increasing secularization as well as by the restriction of kin- ship to the domestic domain (McKinnon and Cannell 2013). But in these essays we see the vitality of sacred kinship not only for domestic life but also for the larger political and economic relations of modern nations and transnational formations. These should not be rendered as “backward” social formations marked by the failure of development, but rather as explicit challenges to the secular, individualistic, and capitalist values that have come to dominate what is considered “modern” in the contempo- rary global order. This volume arose from the work of three graduates from the Department of Anthropology at the University of Virginia—Todne Thomas, Asiya Malik, and Rose Wellman—whose research focused on quite different aspects of the intersection between kinship and the sacred. Through the depth of their enthusiasm, curiosity, and intellectual engage- ment with spiritual kinship, they not only came to define an exciting new terrain for intellectual inquiry but also, in the process, became really real sister-kin. This is the very best of what we hope for in our lives as both intellectual beings and kindred spirits. BiBliograPhy Cannell, Fenella. 2013. The Re-enchantment of Kinship. In Vital Relations: Modernity and the Persistent Life of Kinship, ed. Susan McKinnon and Fenella Cannell, 217–240. Santa Fe: School for Advanced Research Press. Carsten, Janet. 1995. The Substance of Kinship and the Heat of the Hearth: Feeding, Personhood, and Relatedness Among Malays in Pulau Langkawi. American Ethnologist 22(2):223–241.

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This volume examines the significance of spiritual kinship—or kinship reckoned in relation to the divine—in creating myriad forms of affiliations among Christians, Jews, and Muslims. Rather than confining the study of spiritual kinship to Christian godparenthood or presuming its disappearance in
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