How did Death become a Saint in Mexico?

Regnar Albæk Kristensen

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8 Citationer (Scopus)

Abstract

Over the last decade, the cult of La Santa Muerte (St Death) has attracted
a remarkable number of followers in Mexico and the USA. Whereas the social context of her devotees, who tend to live on the fringes of society, has attracted ample attention from scholars and journalists, one of the principal puzzles is still how a skeleton image of death has come to be seen as a saint by large numbers of Catholics. How is it possible for this figure to embrace such antagonistic qualities as death and sainthood in a Christian context? In this semiotic-material exploration of the image’s genealogy, I suggest that La Santa Muerte should be seen as a coalescing of two radically distinct images of death: the popular-secular Catrina and the occult-biblical Santısima Muerte. The St Death venerated today encompasses the ambiguities of the two and creates an exceptionally vibrant and popular Catholic image.
OriginalsprogEngelsk
TidsskriftEthnos. Journal of Anthropology
Sider (fra-til)1-23
Antal sider23
ISSN1469-588X
DOI
StatusUdgivet - 19 aug. 2014

Bibliografisk note

E-pub ahead of print. Published online 19 Aug 2014 as "Latest articles" and will later be assigned to a particular issue of the journal, and given page numbers.

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