Mother Figured: Marian Apparitions and the Making of a Filipino Universal

Author:   Deirdre de la Cruz ,  A01
Publisher:   The University of Chicago Press
ISBN:  

9780226314884


Pages:   320
Publication Date:   30 December 2015
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
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Mother Figured: Marian Apparitions and the Making of a Filipino Universal


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Author:   Deirdre de la Cruz ,  A01
Publisher:   The University of Chicago Press
Imprint:   University of Chicago Press
Dimensions:   Width: 1.50cm , Height: 0.20cm , Length: 2.40cm
Weight:   0.539kg
ISBN:  

9780226314884


ISBN 10:   022631488
Pages:   320
Publication Date:   30 December 2015
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available.

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Deirdre de la Cruz is assistant professor of Southeast Asian studies and history at the University of Michigan.


With her study Mother Figured [De la Cruz] puts with one major scholarly stroke the Philippines (and Southeast Asia) on the global map of Marian (apparitional) studies. With an ethnological approach, combining the theory and methods of anthropology and history, and with an eloquent style, De la Cruz convincingly portrays the importance of Mother Mary for the Filipino community in the postcolonial era. -- The Catholic Historical Review An ambitious endeavor to bridge history and anthropology. -- American Anthropologist This scholarly and richly contextualized book draws our attention to visions and voices, so often overlooked in the study of religion--and so poorly understood. De la Cruz shows us not only the way humans reach out to touch the divine here on earth, but how those moments show us what is particular to that local human world. -- Tanya Luhrmann, Stanford University In Mother Figured, de la Cruz offers a historical ethnography of Christian orthodoxy, miraculous apparitions and public piety in the colonial and post-colonial Philippines. She excavates the roots of Marian devotion in the Spanish missionary deployment of the figure of Mary as the touchstone for conversion and translation. She then traces its subsequent transformation into the simulacrum for the nationalist body, into a post-war mediatrix of miraculous events, into the televisual mother-figure for the Cold War era, and into the depoliticized avatar of the Filipino diaspora. In her varied techniques for inciting faith, de la Cruz uncovers in Marian devotion the workings of modernizing impulses that lead to the emergence less of folk religion as to what she calls a Filipino universal. In its theoretical capaciousness and attention to archival details, Mother Figured marks a singular contribution to the fields of postcolonial religious studies and the history and anthropology of Christianity. -- Vicente L. Rafael, University of Washington De la Cruz offers a complex and detailed set of arguments about a topic which has been a blind spot in studies of Philippine Catholicism up until now. With Mother Figured, she addresses two major gaps in this subject to date. First, she offers a fascinating ethnographic account of elite and middle class religious practice to compare with existing work on rural Catholicism; second, and simultaneously, she provides the first major study of the cult of Mary in its Philippine forms, to compare with the rich literature on Marianism in Europe, Latin America, and beyond. It is an accomplished, theoretically sophisticated, and carefully nuanced book that represents tremendous scholarly labor, against the odds of destroyed archives and uncooperative visionaries. It combines both ethnographic and historical approaches throughout--an important strength. Original, imaginative, elegantly written, and clearly structured, and full of fascinating case study material, Mother Figured is a timely book and clearly a major contribution to the field. -- Fenella Cannell, London School of Economics and Political Science Mother Figured is a major feat of imagination rooted in impressive scholarship and historical research that is relevant, multi-layered, and certainly original--both theoretically and through its combination of subjects, time periods, and modes of analysis. This creative and informative book represents a major step in the ethnography of religion in the Philippines. -- Katherine Wiegele, Northern Illinois University Mother Figured combines history and anthropology in a study of Marian devotion and reported apparitions of the Virgin in the Philippines since the mid-19th century. It considers how the mass media has shaped perceptions of the phenomenon. -- Chronicle


This scholarly and richly contextualized book draws our attention to visions and voices, so often overlooked in the study of religion--and so poorly understood. De la Cruz shows us not only the way humans reach out to touch the divine here on earth, but how those moments show us what is particular to that local human world. --Tanya Luhrmann, Stanford University An ambitious endeavor to bridge history and anthropology. --American Anthropologist In Mother Figured, de la Cruz offers a historical ethnography of Christian orthodoxy, miraculous apparitions and public piety in the colonial and post-colonial Philippines. She excavates the roots of Marian devotion in the Spanish missionary deployment of the figure of Mary as the touchstone for conversion and translation. She then traces its subsequent transformation into the simulacrum for the nationalist body, into a post-war mediatrix of miraculous events, into the televisual mother-figure for the Cold War era, and into the depoliticized avatar of the Filipino diaspora. In her varied techniques for inciting faith, de la Cruz uncovers in Marian devotion the workings of modernizing impulses that lead to the emergence less of folk religion as to what she calls a Filipino universal. In its theoretical capaciousness and attention to archival details, Mother Figured marks a singular contribution to the fields of postcolonial religious studies and the history and anthropology of Christianity. --Vicente L. Rafael, University of Washington Mother Figured combines history and anthropology in a study of Marian devotion and reported apparitions of the Virgin in the Philippines since the mid-19th century. It considers how the mass media has shaped perceptions of the phenomenon. --Chronicle De la Cruz offers a complex and detailed set of arguments about a topic which has been a blind spot in studies of Philippine Catholicism up until now. With Mother Figured, she addresses two major gaps in this subject to date. First, she offers a fascinating ethnographic account of elite and middle class religious practice to compare with existing work on rural Catholicism; second, and simultaneously, she provides the first major study of the cult of Mary in its Philippine forms, to compare with the rich literature on Marianism in Europe, Latin America, and beyond. It is an accomplished, theoretically sophisticated, and carefully nuanced book that represents tremendous scholarly labor, against the odds of destroyed archives and uncooperative visionaries. It combines both ethnographic and historical approaches throughout--an important strength. Original, imaginative, elegantly written, and clearly structured, and full of fascinating case study material, Mother Figured is a timely book and clearly a major contribution to the field. --Fenella Cannell, London School of Economics and Political Science Mother Figured is a major feat of imagination rooted in impressive scholarship and historical research that is relevant, multi-layered, and certainly original--both theoretically and through its combination of subjects, time periods, and modes of analysis. This creative and informative book represents a major step in the ethnography of religion in the Philippines. --Katherine Wiegele, Northern Illinois University


An ambitious endeavor to bridge history and anthropology. -- American Anthropologist This scholarly and richly contextualized book draws our attention to visions and voices, so often overlooked in the study of religion--and so poorly understood. De la Cruz shows us not only the way humans reach out to touch the divine here on earth, but how those moments show us what is particular to that local human world. -- Tanya Luhrmann, Stanford University In Mother Figured, de la Cruz offers a historical ethnography of Christian orthodoxy, miraculous apparitions and public piety in the colonial and post-colonial Philippines. She excavates the roots of Marian devotion in the Spanish missionary deployment of the figure of Mary as the touchstone for conversion and translation. She then traces its subsequent transformation into the simulacrum for the nationalist body, into a post-war mediatrix of miraculous events, into the televisual mother-figure for the Cold War era, and into the depoliticized avatar of the Filipino diaspora. In her varied techniques for inciting faith, de la Cruz uncovers in Marian devotion the workings of modernizing impulses that lead to the emergence less of folk religion as to what she calls a Filipino universal. In its theoretical capaciousness and attention to archival details, Mother Figured marks a singular contribution to the fields of postcolonial religious studies and the history and anthropology of Christianity. -- Vicente L. Rafael, University of Washington De la Cruz offers a complex and detailed set of arguments about a topic which has been a blind spot in studies of Philippine Catholicism up until now. With Mother Figured, she addresses two major gaps in this subject to date. First, she offers a fascinating ethnographic account of elite and middle class religious practice to compare with existing work on rural Catholicism; second, and simultaneously, she provides the first major study of the cult of Mary in its Philippine forms, to compare with the rich literature on Marianism in Europe, Latin America, and beyond. It is an accomplished, theoretically sophisticated, and carefully nuanced book that represents tremendous scholarly labor, against the odds of destroyed archives and uncooperative visionaries. It combines both ethnographic and historical approaches throughout--an important strength. Original, imaginative, elegantly written, and clearly structured, and full of fascinating case study material, Mother Figured is a timely book and clearly a major contribution to the field. -- Fenella Cannell, London School of Economics and Political Science Mother Figured is a major feat of imagination rooted in impressive scholarship and historical research that is relevant, multi-layered, and certainly original--both theoretically and through its combination of subjects, time periods, and modes of analysis. This creative and informative book represents a major step in the ethnography of religion in the Philippines. -- Katherine Wiegele, Northern Illinois University Mother Figured combines history and anthropology in a study of Marian devotion and reported apparitions of the Virgin in the Philippines since the mid-19th century. It considers how the mass media has shaped perceptions of the phenomenon. -- Chronicle


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Deirdre de la Cruz is assistant professor of Southeast Asian studies and history at the University of Michigan.

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