Demonic Possession and Lived Religion in Later Medieval Europe

Research output: Book/ReportBookScientificpeer-review

Abstract

This book focuses on conceptualizations of lived religion by analysing significant case studies from canonization processes (c. 1240–1450). Geographically it covers Western Europe and one of its aims is to compare Northern and Southern material and customs. ‘Lived religion’ is both a thematic approach and a methodology: a focus on rituals, symbols, and gestures as well as sensitivity to nuances and careful contextualizing of the sources are constitutive elements of the argumentation. Demonic possession was a spiritual state that often had physical symptoms. The main argument developed throughout is, however, that demonic possession was a social phenomenon which should be understood with regard to the community and culture. Each set of sources formed its own specific context, in which demonic presence derived from different motivations, reasonings, and methods of categorization. Rituals, gestures, emotions, and sensory elements in constructing demonic presence reveal negotiations over authority and agency. In the argumentation, the hierarchy between the ‘learned’ and ‘popular’ within religion is contested, as is a strict polarity between individual and collective religious participation. Cases of demonic possession demonstrate how the personal affected the communal, and vice versa, and how they were eventually transformed into discourses and institutions of the Church; that is, definitions of the miraculous and the diabolical. Alterity and inversion of identity, gender, and various forms of corporeality and the interplay between the sacred and diabolical are themes running throughout the volume.

Original languageEnglish
Place of PublicationOxford
PublisherOxford University Press
Number of pages224
ISBN (Print)9780198850465, 0198850468
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2020
Publication typeC1 Scientific book

Publication series

NameOxford Studies in Medieval European history

Keywords

  • medieval history, Europe, lived religion, canonization process, hagiography, miracle, demonic possession, gender, pilgrimage

Publication forum classification

  • Publication forum level 3

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