<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?><article xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance">
<front>
<journal-meta>
<journal-id>0100-8587</journal-id>
<journal-title><![CDATA[Religião & Sociedade]]></journal-title>
<abbrev-journal-title><![CDATA[Relig. soc.]]></abbrev-journal-title>
<issn>0100-8587</issn>
<publisher>
<publisher-name><![CDATA[Instituto de Estudos da Religião (ISER)]]></publisher-name>
</publisher>
</journal-meta>
<article-meta>
<article-id>S0100-85872006000200003</article-id>
<title-group>
<article-title xml:lang="en"><![CDATA[The home sanctuary. Personhood, family and religiosity]]></article-title>
<article-title xml:lang="pt"><![CDATA[O sacrário original. Pessoa, família e religiosidade]]></article-title>
</title-group>
<contrib-group>
<contrib contrib-type="author">
<name>
<surname><![CDATA[Duarte]]></surname>
<given-names><![CDATA[Luiz Fernando Dias]]></given-names>
</name>
<xref ref-type="aff" rid="A01"/>
</contrib>
<contrib contrib-type="author">
<name>
<surname><![CDATA[Rodgers]]></surname>
<given-names><![CDATA[David]]></given-names>
</name>
</contrib>
</contrib-group>
<aff id="A01">
<institution><![CDATA[,UFRJ Museu Nacional ]]></institution>
<addr-line><![CDATA[ ]]></addr-line>
</aff>
<pub-date pub-type="pub">
<day>00</day>
<month>00</month>
<year>2006</year>
</pub-date>
<pub-date pub-type="epub">
<day>00</day>
<month>00</month>
<year>2006</year>
</pub-date>
<volume>2</volume>
<numero>se</numero>
<fpage>0</fpage>
<lpage>0</lpage>
<copyright-statement/>
<copyright-year/>
<self-uri xlink:href="http://socialsciences.scielo.org/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&amp;pid=S0100-85872006000200003&amp;lng=en&amp;nrm=iso"></self-uri><self-uri xlink:href="http://socialsciences.scielo.org/scielo.php?script=sci_abstract&amp;pid=S0100-85872006000200003&amp;lng=en&amp;nrm=iso"></self-uri><self-uri xlink:href="http://socialsciences.scielo.org/scielo.php?script=sci_pdf&amp;pid=S0100-85872006000200003&amp;lng=en&amp;nrm=iso"></self-uri><abstract abstract-type="short" xml:lang="en"><p><![CDATA[It is our aim to deepen the understanding of family life in modern societies through an emphasis on its 'religious'-like quality. The description of some of its phenomenal properties, of its intense and crucial experiential dimension, includes several traits of a family cult (mostly inexplicit). This fact has important consequences for the actualization of the contemporary experience of established religious institutions. The intrinsic 'relatedness' at the basis of both 'cults' take shape in a broad and varied range of empirical phenomena, dependent on the status of personhood within the family structure. Our data include both the results of direct original research within several status groups in the area of Rio de Janeiro and the information available about family and religion in Brazilian society.]]></p></abstract>
<abstract abstract-type="short" xml:lang="pt"><p><![CDATA[Trata-se de avançar o entendimento da experiência da vida familiar nas sociedades modernas como caracterizada por uma crucialidade e intensidade próximas de uma 'religiosidade', de descrever algumas de suas propriedades fenomenais, sobretudo a de um culto familiar (frequentemente inexplícito) e de analisar as implicações dessa correlação também para o funcionamento contemporâneo das religiões. Explora-se a 'relacionalidade' intrínseca a essas duas dimensões da vida social e se discute as diferenças nesse culto encontráveis dentro das sociedades modernas contemporâneas, relacionando-as ao estatuto diferencial da pessoa componente da ordem familiar, através de informação constante da literatura sociológica e de pesquisa original com diversos segmentos sociais na região do Grande Rio de Janeiro.]]></p></abstract>
<kwd-group>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[family]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[religion]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[personhood]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[family cult]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[relatedness]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="pt"><![CDATA[família]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="pt"><![CDATA[religião]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="pt"><![CDATA[pessoa]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="pt"><![CDATA[culto doméstico]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="pt"><![CDATA[relacionalidade]]></kwd>
</kwd-group>
</article-meta>
</front><body><![CDATA[ <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"><b><a  name="_ftnref1" title=""></a></b></font><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="4"><b>The    home sanctuary – Personhood, family and religiosity</b></font></p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p><font size="3" face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>O sacr&aacute;rio    original - Pessoa, fam&iacute;lia e religiosidade</b></font></p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"><b>Luiz Fernando    Dias Duarte<a href="#_ftn1"  title=""><sup>1</sup></a></b></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Museu Nacional,    UFRJ</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Translated by David    Rodgers    <br>   Translation from <b> Religião e Sociedade</b>, Rio de Janeiro, v.26, n.2, p.11-40,    2006.</font></p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p>&nbsp;</p>     <p>  <hr size=1 noshade>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"><b>ABSTRACT</b></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"> It is our aim    to deepen the understanding of family life in modern societies through an emphasis    on its 'religious'-like quality. The description of some of its phenomenal properties,    of its intense and crucial experiential dimension, includes several traits of    a family cult (mostly inexplicit). This fact has important consequences for    the actualization of the contemporary experience of established religious institutions.    The intrinsic 'relatedness' at the basis of both 'cults' take shape in a broad    and varied range of empirical phenomena, dependent on the status of personhood    within the family structure. Our data include both the results of direct original    research within several status groups in the area of Rio de Janeiro and the    information available about family and religion in Brazilian society. </font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"><b>Key words:</b>    family, religion, personhood, family cult, relatedness.</font></p> <hr size=1 noshade>     <p></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"><b>RESUMO</b> </font>  </p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"> Trata-se de avan&ccedil;ar    o entendimento da experi&ecirc;ncia da vida familiar nas sociedades modernas    como caracterizada por uma crucialidade e intensidade pr&oacute;ximas de uma    'religiosidade', de descrever algumas de suas propriedades fenomenais, sobretudo    a de um culto familiar (frequentemente inexpl&iacute;cito) e de analisar as    implica&ccedil;&otilde;es dessa correla&ccedil;&atilde;o tamb&eacute;m para    o funcionamento contempor&acirc;neo das religi&otilde;es. Explora-se a 'relacionalidade'    intr&iacute;nseca a essas duas dimens&otilde;es da vida social e se discute    as diferen&ccedil;as nesse culto encontr&aacute;veis dentro das sociedades modernas    contempor&acirc;neas, relacionando-as ao estatuto diferencial da pessoa componente    da ordem familiar, atrav&eacute;s de informa&ccedil;&atilde;o constante da literatura    sociol&oacute;gica e de pesquisa original com diversos segmentos sociais na    regi&atilde;o do Grande Rio de Janeiro.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"><b>Palavras-chave:    </b>fam&iacute;lia, religi&atilde;o, pessoa, culto dom&eacute;stico, relacionalidade.</font></p> <hr size=1 noshade>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p>&nbsp;</p>     <p align="right"><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">“Plus    me plaît le séjour qu'ont bâti mes aïeux,    <br>   </font><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Que des palais    romains le front audacieux (…)”    <br>   </font><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Joachim du    Bellay [1522 – 1560]</font></p>     <p align="right"><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">“I    entered. A caring and friendly spirit    <br>   </font><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">The ghost    perhaps of maternal love    <br>   </font><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Took my hands    – looked at me, solemn and tender,    <br>   </font><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">And step    by step, walked me through (...)”    <br>   </font><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Luís Guimarães    Júnior, “Visit to my father's house,” 1876</font></p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="3"><b>1. Introduction</b></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Towards the end    of a series of interviews on family and religion among the Rio de Janeiro elite,    I had already become resigned to the almost total absence of references to any    explicit religious experiences (though more formal or ritual situations of contact    with churches, especially the Catholic Church, were fairly common) when I realized    that the recurrent, intense and almost obsessively reverential tone associated    with contexts other than religious experience were, in this social circle, linked    to family living, the memory of past family experiences, the fate of close kin    and the enveloping feelings of family identity. The theme unleashed a stream    of digressions, complex references to a universe of meaning imbued with an active    and continuous symbolic force; literally, a 'sacred' universe. This allowed    me to re-read the flow of information produced in the interviews with other    social sectors and to perceive the extent to which the abundant references to    explicitly 'religious' experiences were mixed, in these cases, with 'family'    experiences, configuring a kind of unified field traversed with value-laden    references, identificatory marks and experiential dispositions.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Although metaphors    of the sacred are frequently used to refer to the family, both in Western common    sense and in sociological theories and descriptions, this resource serves only    to highlight the seriousness with which social subjects experience this institution,    rather than the exploitation of any real phenomenological proximity between    these two dimensions of social life. This means we are compelled to take the    affinity seriously and try to understand how the experience of family life in    modern societies is defined by a centrality and intensity matching a kind of    'religiosity.' Likewise, the aim should be to describe some of its phenomenal    properties (especially that of a frequently inexplicit family cult) and analyze    the implications of this correlation for the contemporary functioning of religions    in the strict sense.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Various works examining    the empirical relationship between family and religion suggest that, in our    culture, the proximity between these dimensions is due to structural features    shaping the modern public world and the withdrawal of family and religion to    the dimension of the 'private' where they are supposedly condemned to live in    close proximity (see Christiano 2000, for example). In fact, religion – despite    being officially excluded from modern public affairs – achieves a complex mediation    between public and private life due to its simultaneously intimate and ecclesiastical,    subjective and institutional nature. The same applies to the family, since,    despite being confined to the walls of the household, it constitutes a legally    recognized institution, valued as a minimal instance of sociopolitical organization    and attributed with responsibilities and rights carefully safeguarded by the    State.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Analytically, it    is more profitable to consider the two dimensions as jointly responsible for    affirming the constitutive 'relatedness' of social life (in the sense of the    term explored in Carsten 2000). Not the <i>a posteriori</i> relatedness posited    by individualist theories of the western public realm, but a relatedness thought    and lived as <i>a priori</i> in relation to the emergence of the subject. Although    both family and religious life trajectories usually anticipate a passage from    the attributed to the acquired (creation of a new family; conversion or confirmation    of religious affiliation), both base themselves on what is conceived as an originary    situation, a pristine sanctuary from which the family member or the follower    of a specific faith emerge (for instance, “this is my family of origin” or “I'm    a Catholic by birth”).</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">This 'relatedness'    amounts to a sociological version of a more ambitious analytic possibility,    cosmological in kind, heir of the Durkheimian definition of the sacred as the    expression of a feeling or perception of 'totality' (Durkheim 1968). The notion    that the elementary quality of religious life is one of the encompassing order    of a cosmos of <i>a priori</i> meaning pervades the thinking of M. Mauss, C.    Lévi-Strauss and L. Dumont, in contrast to more empiricist or phenomenological    definitions.<a href="#_ftn2" name="_ftnref2" title=""><sup>2</sup></a> It is    this acceptation of 'religious' that enables an inexplicit or even lay form    of religiosity to be postulated, such as the kind characterizing the modern    western family. This is certainly the sense in which Durkheim analyzes modern,    laic, rationalizing individualism as a 'cult of the self,' a paradoxical religiosity    (Durkheim 1968:606).<a href="#_ftn3" name="_ftnref3" title=""><sup>3</sup></a> Robert Bellah extended this insight to what he called    'civil religion' (developing an idea from J.-J. Rousseau) in the ideology of    North American national public life: a set of cosmological premises of a 'sacred'    kind, structuring a lay – or at least a religiously non-institutionalized –    idea of nation.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">If we follow Louis    Dumont in taking the ideology of individualism as the key to the worldview of    modern western culture, we also have to consider that this overtly laïc representation    possesses a symbolic force just as structuring and encompassing as that of any    other religion. Other authors have shown us how the social implementation of    this ideology is highly dependent on the institution of the 'modern family,'    as a paradoxical nucleus of <i>societas</i>: a factory of individuals internally    structured according to a hierarchical order (Foucault 1979; Duarte 1995). The    tense and institutive overlap between the individual and the modern family set    in motion from the 18<sup>th</sup> century remains fully active in the dominant    sectors of contemporary societies, in spite of intense changes and supervening    shifts, without ceasing to influence the less individualized social sectors.    More specifically, the family enables the combination of two cosmological principles    concomitant with individualism: <i>subjectivism</i>, as the emphasis on the    value of individual subjective autonomy, and <i>naturalism</i>, as the particular    representation of the reality and substantiality of the universe considered    subjacent to the moral or cultural world (Duarte <i>et al</i>. 2006). The naturalist    representation of kinship as communion and inheritance of family <i>blood</i>    is linked to the subjectivist representation of freedom of choice in the forging    of matrimonial alliances (especially through the ideology of love), a conjunction    recognized and analyzed in some of the most successful analyses of western kinship    (see in particular Schneider 1968; Viveiros de Castro &amp; Araújo 1977; Strathern    1992). The contradictions intrinsic to this combined model of ascribed and acquired    status help sustain its complex dynamic, allowing slippages of meaning that    are highly productive in sociological terms.<a href="#_ftn4" name="_ftnref4" title=""><sup>4</sup></a>    The sacredness of representations of inherited blood, as well as those characterizing    the ideals of individual freedom and autonomy, comprise the religiosity imprinted    on the family institution in our culture.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"> </font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="3"><b>2. Approaches    and characteristics</b></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">The central empirical    material underlying this work derives from long-term anthropological research    into family and religion among various social sectors of the Greater Rio de    Janeiro area. The difficulty of conducting research on often personally intimate    questions among a range of social classes over the same period of time is offset    by the comparative dimension being incorporated into the same investigative    process, rather than comparing the results deriving from different studies.</font></p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">The ethnographic    groupings obtained from the latter approach are highly unequal, since the referential    axes vary enormously between the elite and middle classes sectors and those    of the working classes – in ways that I explicate below. Moreover, as I mentioned    earlier, I believe that the greater possibilities for objectifying family sacrality    among the elite and middle classes help cast a new light on the corresponding    data in the working classes, where synchronic intensity tends to prevail over    diachronic intensity. A key differentiating factor between the two groupings    is that my working class informants are primarily men, while the middle and    upper class informants are mostly women, an outcome of the very distinct protocols    regulating relations between genders and a male researcher in these two social    environments. This is a relevant factor in terms of obtaining information on    family and religion since in both these social macro-sectors the intensity and    the type of dedication given to the family and to religion are highly gender-dependent.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Given this broad    spectrum of research, I kept in mind the possibility of incorporating information    obtained from informal social contexts into my ethnographic corpus, in parallel    with information available in the bibliography. Whether in my network of friends    or in academic contexts, mention of the research issues examined in this text    always elicited interesting feedback on aspects of the personal life or research    experience of my interlocutors. Nor have I discarded either my own personal    experience as a member of this culture or information from newspapers and magazines    and the vast material already objectified in western fiction, whether in literature,    films or television. However, the examples examined here are mostly taken from    the formal research material.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">It is interesting    to note that, although the literature on the family and religion in our culture    is extremely abundant, there are very few works that shed any real light on    the overlapping of these two dimensions. What can be found are texts on the    value and representation of the family (and hence conjugality, reproduction    and sexuality) in religious contexts or on the presence, importance and onus    of religion (and hence doctrine, congregation and the kind of affiliation) in    family contexts. Most of the time, authors attempt to evaluate (as Christiano    2000 notes in his survey) the 'influence' or 'impact' of religious attitudes    on the conduct of family life. This general tendency demands an oblique inquiry    into the literature, reading between the lines of the ethnographic information    for potential insights into our topic of analysis. As I have emphasized in other    works, I think it is insufficient to analyze the relationship between religious    belonging and private ethos in modern western societies in terms of a religious    'influence' on the behaviour of believers. Rather, this relationship should    be understood in terms of broader (and apparently laïc) behavioural patterns    that help determine the persistence or transformation of the religious affiliation    of subjects (cf. Duarte 2005 and Duarte <i>et al</i>. 2006).</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">The biggest problem    faced in any ethnographic treatment of family religiosity is its essentially    unconscious and non-explicit nature. Due to the predominant idea of religion    in western culture as something primarily associated with ecclesiastical institutions,    the subtle presence of the sacred in areas that are not conventionally religious    makes social subjects less willing to consider the experiences and representations    discussed here as religious or even sacred. Although this problem is not confined    to the family, it is particularly evident in this area, tending to manifest    in two forms: among the upper class sectors, the prevailing rationalist ethos    means that the family world is not conceived as sacred, while religion tends    to be limited to very specific experiences, ritually distanced from everyday    life, or is simply eliminated as a relevant category in terms of personal life    histories and identities. Among sectors of the working class, the presence of    the sacred is almost always strongly institutionalized, although in many different    ways, meaning that the sacred dimension of family life is recognized as immediately    religious – rather than as the result of its familial nature <i>per se</i>.    Hence, the same effect of boundary blurring arises on one hand from a curtailment    of the religious experience of the world and on the other from its intensification.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">A female informant    of my own generation, coming from the highest circles of the Brazilian elite,    strongly associated with the Catholic religion and an avid consumer of 'New    Age' symbolism, provided a highly emotional account of the most varied aspects    of her family life: her family tradition, its values and tensions and the building    of her experiential universe of origin in constant contrast with the challenges    of her new family, the tradition and values of her spouse's family and the characteristics    of the experiential universe in which her descendents live today. In her case,    the sensibility to private life which our culture attributes to women is enhanced    by her training in social studies and the arts – in addition to a specific attentiveness    to family life that can be attributed, as she herself suggests, to the powerful    tensions making up her family of origin. She once described a visit she had    recently made to a prestigious family property in the process of being sold.    This led to a profuse and complex mingling of sensations and feelings about    this episode (and its lengthy back history), ending with her declaration that    she had succeeded in 'desacralizing' this legacy by staunching the emotional    'overflow' that it always provoked.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Another informant    from the same social class and the same generation, a fine artist, the grandson    of a key figure from Brazil's art world, told me at one point that “my grandfather    is my Holy Spirit,” an expression that encapsulated the ongoing dialogue with    this family inheritance, present in his existential dilemmas, in the present-day    relations with his family network and in his own artistic choices. At that time,    he was working on a painting in which his grandfather appeared, destined for    an event celebrating his life.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Another informant    from the upper middle class, older and recently widowed, emotionally recalled    her early home life and the memory of her father in particular (expressing her    belief that she had been his favourite daughter). After describing various experiences    involving shifts or intensifications in her own religiosity, including the family's    participation in a prayer circle at a Presbyterian church during a period when    the fate of her own children particularly concerned her, she commented on the    close bond she had developed with her youngest granddaughter. Her recent absorption    of Kardecist beliefs mean that she now conceives of her granddaughter as “my    mother too,” eliciting and reinforcing the intense communion emerging between    them. </font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">In this somewhat    random array of references, we can encounter three feelings essential to any    recognition of the sacred dimension of family life: <b>communion</b>, <b>reverence</b>    and <b>intensity</b>.<a href="#_ftn5" name="_ftnref5" title=""><sup>5</sup></a>    Although these social feelings may occur in many other life contexts, their    combination typifies the sacred and its particular force and legitimacy. The    feeling of communion, stressed by all the classic analyses of religion, is first    and foremost here too. This communion shares features with the <i>Gemeinschaft    </i>of Tönnies, a fact highlighting the omnipresence of the category of 'community'    in Western religious language (as well as Victor Turner's use of the word <i>communitas</i>    to explain the same feeling in another ethnographic and analytic context). More    individualized, the middle and upper class informants lack the feeling of communion    as a pervasive dimension of their life experiences. Instead, it is expressed    in their occasional (and often fleeting) involvement in activities that help    symbolize their particular desire for well-being and individual fulfilment.    (Such activities may comprise love affairs, psychoanalytic therapy, practicing    some kind of sport, becoming involved in a 'New Age' pastime or dedicating oneself    to art and aesthetics). These segmentary forms of communion, described by Bellah    <i>et al</i>. as typical examples of 'lifestyle enclaves' (1985), are complemented    by the somewhat unique totalizing experience of family communion, even in cases    where life circumstances have tended to generate an indifferent or even blasphemous    attitude in relation to the value of this communion.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">For these class    sectors, the experience of the feeling of reverence is very similar. Raised    on the individualist critique of any kind of hierarchy, their members usually    avoid manifesting axiomatic respect for much of the surrounding culture. Apart    from the occasional constructions found in their lifestyle enclaves, the family    is once more the primary recipient of this feeling.<a href="#_ftn6" name="_ftnref6" title=""><sup>6</sup></a></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Finally, communion    and reverence are complemented by the differential intensity with which the    sacred dimensions of social life are experienced. This basically amounts to    an experiential, affective and sentimental intensity linked to a strong mobilization    of bodily expression. A range of altered states of consciousness are associated    with religious experiences in all kinds of cultures, especially those we classified    as trance and possession. These situations are particularly radical examples    of the intensity being described here, present in the statements of informants    in more conventional circumstances, although enveloped with the aura of exceptional    affective states.<a href="#_ftn7" name="_ftnref7" title=""><sup>7</sup></a> For the informants cited above, the immediate experience    and the recollection of their family experiences (or some of them, at least)    form a strong nucleus of feeling in which the emotions of sharing and respect    are magnified by a particular intensity.</font></p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Finally, it should    be emphasized that these experiences, however intense and relational they may    be, do not always correspond to collective, shared social situations, whether    ritual or mundane. These feelings are basically lived as personal and intimate    and very often seen as unshareable with others. In many cases of my research,    across a variety of social contexts, people expressed their gratitude to me    for having given them the chance to externalize these feelings in a sustained    and systematic way; there was also some concern that the recordings may have    stored overly secret, sensitive, serious and important matters.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">This intimacy is    a core aspect of the fictional literature (or personal memoirs) describing the    subject's embedding in the family, providing a literary outlet for these intense    personal experiences.  'Family novels' may well have emerged simultaneously    with 'individual novels,' highlighting the intimate connections between the    two institutions. In some cases, the fictional emphasis on the individual meant    that family memories had to seek refuge in other types of text: Goethe, for    example, constructed his personal memories essentially as a family novel (1986),    a focus uncharacteristic of his fictional texts which are typical of the nascent    and individualizing <i>Bildungsroman</i>. Many of the novelists from his generation,    such as Jane Austen and the Brontë sisters, did focus on the family as much    as the emergent individual, though. This process became one of the mainstays    of 19<sup>th</sup> century literature, manifest in works as renowned as those    of Balzac, Stendhal, Flaubert, Dostoyevsky and Eça de Queiroz. In 20<sup>th</sup>    century literature, the most prominent example is Marcel Proust's <i>Recherche</i>,    finding other leading exponents in Brazil like José Lins do Rêgo, Lucio Cardoso    and Érico Verissimo.<a href="#_ftn8" name="_ftnref8" title=""><sup>8</sup></a></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">The human sciences    have contributed two important currents towards recognizing and explicating    the crucial nature of family experience for social subjects. The most obvious    contribution comes from psychology where attention on the family roots of subjectivity    grew from the end of the 19th century in contrast to the formalist tendencies    then prevalent in academic psychology. Here the influence of Freudian psychoanalysis    is fundamental: its organization of the individual's psychic development around    family experience set off a process of focusing attention on the 'parental'    dimension that subsequently evolved into an extremely wide variety of theoretical    approaches. These distinct theoretical lines have resulted in a copious literature    on family experience, a corpus of extremely uneven quality and not always readily    accessible to anthropological perusal due to the specific conventions involved    in the production of psychological or psychoanalytic case studies. In terms    of contemporary works, my research has particularly benefited from analyses    formulated in the context of systemic (or 'family') therapies and transgenerational    psychoanalysis, where the recognition of the high intensity that surrounds the    feelings of family communion and reverence helps reveal the sacrality of such    experiences through the contexts of disturbance and pathology (see, for example,    Ponciano &amp; Feres-Carneiro 2003 and Abraham &amp; Torok 1987).</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">The social sciences    have also produced fundamental works in terms of comprehending the historical    relation between family and person in modern western culture. These include    texts by the likes of Philippe Ariès and Michel Foucault, as well as a specific    strand of sociological and anthropological studies on the family, focused on    presenting and discussing the affective and experiential dimension of this space.    Without pretending to provide an exhaustive list, we can cite a number of classic    works, more monographic in style, such as <i>Worker in the Cane</i> by Sidney    Mintz (1964), or <i>Uses of Literacy</i> by Richard Hoggart (1973), or indeed    more recent studies such as those produced by Josette Coenen-Huther (1994),    Anne Muxel (1996), Jean-Hughes Déchaux (1997) and Claudine Attias-Donfut (2000)    in France, and Myriam Lins de Barros (1987), Miriam Moreira Leite (1993), Guita    Debert (1999), Claudia Fonseca (2000) and Clarice Peixoto (2000), among others,    in Brazil.</font></p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="3"><b>3. A 'religion    of the family'</b></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">In claiming to    explore the specific properties of the relationship between family and religion    in modern western culture, I am not discarding the potential contribution of    comparative ethnographic and historical evidence to the project. What simply    needs to be stressed is the considerable distance prevailing between these materials    and the context at hand.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">The difficulty    resides, above all, in the differences between what is conceived as religion    and family in our culture and what is taken as an equivalent to these institutions    in other symbolic orders. We know, for instance, how these categories are largely    unsuited to describing the social experience of small-scale 'tribal' societies    where the categories of kinship and cosmology are more adequate for comprehending    their internal modes of organization.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">In other cultures,    such as traditional China, what corresponds to the western idea of religion    is frequently presented as a rationalization of the sense of family belonging,    at least from the viewpoint of the hegemonic Confucianist ideology (cf. Weber    1968). In classical Roman culture, the complementarity between the wider civic    cult (including the personal figure of the Caesars during the Empire period)    and the domestic cult within the family provided the basis for the prevailing    cosmological and sociological order. The spread of Christianity depended on    a fundamental subversion of this complementarity, both at the broader doctrinal    level and the level of the personal experiences of potential believers, who    were led to renounce their loyalty to the two traditional orders simultaneously.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">A shared trait    of these culturally distinct situations is the segmentary nature of their dominant    kinship model; that is, unilinear descent – guided in both cases by patrilineal    privileges. Hence, instead of our institution of the 'minimal, reduced, nuclear    family,' we find a clan-like corporate lineage, even more explicitly endowed    with moral pre-eminence, a transgenerational identity and affective identification.    The other fundamental trait is an investment in the reproduction of relational    persons and a system predicated on the ascribed status in a way completely antagonistic    to the individualizing precepts of modern western family education.</font></p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">The corporate and    hierarchical nature of these 'families' confers them with have an immediate    congregational quality, expressed through sacred objects, places and times and    guaranteed by the performance of regular explicit rituals. Here we also find    the elements of communion, reverence and intensity mentioned earlier, but acting    within a very different context – at the visible and explicit centre of the    symbolic and social order. Ancestor cults, a common feature of segmentary societies,    gave shape to these feelings at a totalizing level of meaning where the generational    theme directly embodied an encompassing cosmological order (cf. Fortes 1970).</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">In the western    tradition, where religious belonging is originally represented as alien or antagonistic    to public order and the outside world, and where the process of conversion rather    than linear inheritance comprises the main model of affiliation, there is an    inevitable ontological distance between the family and the congregation (as    a basic form of bringing together converts).</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">The Christian focus    on acquired religious status has a couple of important implications. Firstly,    the religious congregation is frequently presented as an alternative to the    family, or indeed a hyper-family, possessing a sense of communion and reverence    capable of producing a redoubled intensity.<a href="#_ftn9" name="_ftnref9" title=""><sup>9</sup></a>    Secondly, like any other organizational form, the Christian sects (in the Weberian    sense) depend on the reproduction of their members and can only achieve this    through a relationship with families (which continue to produce the people capable    of becoming believers).</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">The intersection    of these two antagonistic dispositions led to the production of highly varied    solutions over the time and space of the Christian tradition. While the 'sect'    form maintained the focus on the community of converts, investing it with family-like    qualities, the 'church' form depended on the institutional acceptance of attributed    status, meaning the establishment of enduring relationships with the family    units in which its followers were born and raised. Obviously the main concern    was to ensure an ethos was cultivated in favour of the church in question, thereby    dispelling any tensions between the two forms of belonging. This meant that,    alongside an internal structure that evoked family order and hierarchy (analogous    to the structure of the sects), fairly complex rationalizations were able to    be developed vis-à-vis the close ties between religious communion <i>sensu stricto    </i>and family communion. Indeed, this process has been a notable aspect of    Christianity's history, amply registered in histories of the western family    (see Ariès 1978, for example).</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">With the general    spread of the modern model of the family from the 18<sup>th</sup> century onwards    and the consequent hegemony of the process of producing 'individuals,' there    was an intensification in the Christian idealization of the family. This was    especially pronounced in the Protestant universe where the dynamic tension between    sect/congregation and family became more acutely manifest. Kevin Christiano's    analysis (2000) of North American Christianity in the 19th century provides    a deep insight into this process, describing the emergence of what he calls    'domestic Christianity' in the midst of a national society more radically committed    to experimenting with individualizing forms of sociality. As the author stress,    this formula – typified by a radical sacralization of intradomestic life, a    supplement to (and sometimes substitute for) congregational life – initially    took root and expanded within the Protestant universe but ended up spreading    to Catholicism too (particularly in connection with the cult of the Holy Family).<a href="#_ftn10" name="_ftnref10" title=""><sup>10</sup></a></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">This wider process    did not prevent the emergence of numerous other solutions specific to particular    social classes, ethnic groups, national traditions and belief systems. This    is how the elite classes tended to ensure their own reproduction through a very    specific emphasis on the corporate nature of their family networks, sustained    by an ideology of inheriting identity, even in contexts where the acquisition    of individualized dispositions (in the business world, for example) may be crucial    to their reproduction (see for instance Lomnitz &amp; Perez-Lizaur 1987 and    Pinçon &amp; Pinçon-Charlot 1989). The explicit religious dimension may have    an important bearing here under highly ritualized forms in which the sense of    religious and family communion and reverence is hard to distinguish.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">An interesting    alternative example is the constitution of a spiritual congregation that complexly    overlaps family belonging, as found among groups influenced by Kardecism. One    of the informants cited above evokes precisely this point when she claims that    her kinship with her granddaughter intensified as a result of discovering her    to be the reincarnation of her own mother (see Mazur 2006 for an extended analysis    of a similar case).</font></p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="3"><b>4. Religion    in the family</b></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">There is a shifting    and subtle boundary between the religiosity of the family and the experience    of religion <i>in</i> the family, that is, within the domestic unit or home.    Although this distinction is not ontological, it is situationally relevant,    demonstrating the differential properties of the forms in which the phenomenon    examined here is actualized. </font></p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">The hegemony of    the model of the minimal nuclear family in modern societies does not eliminate    the feeling of belonging to some kind of wider relational order, even in national    and class cultures more exposed to individualization. What I described earlier    as a lineage congregation in other cultures can be compared here with the imaginary    congregation formed by the complex of transgenerational bilateral kinship conceived    as an ideal, private and intimate corporation of affects and memories – rather    than an effective corporation or network. Although the network may also exist    and sometimes be activated, it depends on the feeling of intimate and personal    communion without which the self tends to detach from any effective conviviality,    experiencing the latter as inauthentic and lacking in any stimulus towards intensity.    </font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Various authors    have worked to demonstrate the historically constructed form of the modern western    'family feeling' ('family life,' the 'family environment' and so on) in association    with the complex sequence of transformations providing us with the representation    and practice of the modern family (see Ariès 1978, for example). This new domesticity    is composed by a set of ideals such as intimacy, privacy, interiority and comfort,    and depends on a total reorganization of sociability, social relations and the    use of space.<a href="#_ftn11" name="_ftnref11" title=""><sup>11</sup></a></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">This privatized    and segregated space has inherited from earlier family models the responsibility    for forms of religious worship that were already performed in domestic space    and that always varied widely according to the social class in question. A continuity    in forms of domestic worship can therefore be found, perceived as refractions    of the institutional sacrality centred on churches and shrines. These devotional    practices may be more or less institutionalized, centred on real chapels or    altars for collective use by the household or dispersed in individual nodules,    according to the localized predilections of each member of the family against    a shared religious background.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Although this 'domestic    Christianity' is fundamental to consolidating the religiosity we are examining    here, it is just one aspect of domestic sacrality: it makes up the more visible    and official component of the more deep-lying experience to which I am referring    here as the 'religiosity of the family.' The feelings of communion and reverence    dedicated within this interior space to the outer ecclesiastical sacred order    overlap feelings of communion and reverence directly relating to family experience.    Various informants report instances of collective or individual prayer held    in their residences, making use of conventional religious formulas to transmit    their anxieties, expectations and evaluations of interpersonal family life,    particularly during periods of crisis and suffering. In the Catholic tradition,    novenas, rosaries, vows, jaculatory prayers and various set prayers were capable    of establishing a flow of relations with the sacred whose meaning was primarily    attached to the cult of the family itself – its preservation and salvation.<a href="#_ftn12" name="_ftnref12" title=""><sup>12</sup></a>    The feelings of communion and reverence were simultaneously centred on the invocation    of propitiatory supernatural entities and the dedication to family entities.    There are even two or three cases in which informants reported conversing directly    with dead family members, albeit through fixed prayers, combining the terrestrial    and transterrestrial planes in a singular form (cf. Taussig 1980 and Cioccari    2006, for other examples of this cult).</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">The particular    intensity of the sacred is not absent from family-based worship. There are numerous    references – across all social classes – to situations of exceptional emotion    in dealings with living or dead family members: a presence in dreams, premonitions,    hauntings, a feeling of intense communion during jubilant commemorations (marked    by religious rituals such as baptisms, first communion, bar mitzvahs, marriages,    wedding anniversaries, graduation masses, etc.). Indeed, this set of simultaneously    ecclesiastical and family devotional practices, characteristic of devote families,    is also found among 'disenchanted' families lacking any contact with ecclesiastical    religious experience. The sacrality of the family is expressed in innumerable    forms in this context while the language used derives precisely from the religious    universe. These forms involve rituals, prayers and other forms of worship, invested    with a de-institutionalized lay piety, yet still undoubtedly containing feelings    of communion and reverence tinged by a particular intensity. In some cases,    this lay piety also makes use of religious formulas dislocated from their original    context, as in the case of night time prayers to dead ancestors: here the prayer    inscription serves merely as a pretext for a form of ritual invocation aimed    directly towards the family cult. The latter practice was recorded among various    informants from the middle and upper classes with Catholic or Jewish family    backgrounds whose personal histories evince a drift towards a more laïc lifestyle.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">These feelings    of communion and reverence sometimes acquire a rationalized tone where the emphasis    falls on the moral exemplarity of a past relative's behaviour or identity. In    these cases – such as that cited above of the grandson of the renowned artist    – distinguishing the profane and sacred components of this private hagiography    becomes nearly impossible. </font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">As we can see,    dead relatives, especially ancestors, have a privileged and more overtly sacred    place than the contemporary and living, though this rule is by no means absolute.    Feelings of communion with the dead are obviously more readily capable of acquiring    a transcendental nature than communion with the living, who are more likely    to be merged with the profane and the mundane. In many cases, including in Kardecist    families, this distinction may be blurred considerably not only by the overlapping    of living and dead identities but also the feeling of proximity and frequent    conversation with 'disembodied' spirits, whether family or otherwise.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">My research revealed    a wide array of domestic, private practices making up family cults, along with    a specific range of <i>sacra</i> relating exclusively to family memory and circulating    in more or less private contexts. Among upper middle class and elite families,    these <i>sacra</i> may include real estate, residences, lands or monuments linked    to family history, making them fairly public, therefore. As we descend the social    ladder, these <i>memorabilia</i> become more discrete and private, at an extreme    becoming merely the simple personal memory of people and events, or merging    into broader references to a neighbourhood, a home town or a region.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">The most well-known    storehouses of these cults are photographs, already widespread in our culture    for several generations (see Lins de Barros &amp; Strozenberg 1992; Leite 1993).    Because of their directly referential nature (linked to the idea of a personal    'portrait'), they have a prominent place among other kinds of family memorabilia,    such as art objects, archives, libraries, furniture, jewellery and so on. Among    the middle classes, the hereditary transmission of certain objects such as recipe    books (passed down via a female line) and old pocket watches (passed down via    a male line) has been a topic of detailed study (Carvalho 2005).<a href="#_ftn13" name="_ftnref13" title=""><sup>13</sup></a></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Many of these heirlooms    are kept in private places and little frequented, like relics in a shrine. They    only receive more pronounced attention when ownership is passed on, often becoming    the object of lively disputes, revealing their permanently high potential for    generating intense emotion. For my middle and upper class informants, the bequests    of jewellery, antiques and small <i>objets de vertu</i> imbued with family <i>mana</i>    are particularly significant. In the same way as the sacred <i>kula</i> objects    of the Trobriand Islanders described by Malinowski, these wealth items may circulate    far and wide across space and time, traversing the generations and accruing    sacredness. I collected various emotion reports on items or objects that had    vanished or been sold, but whose symbolic force remains in the memory of informants    and sustains the feeling of communion and reverence. Just as the accumulated    memory of such <i>sacra</i> is crucial, taking due care over their future transmission    is fundamental. One informant, aware that she was soon to die, spent hours with    me discussing the destiny of some of the main items from her personal collection,    trying to match the qualities of each of her descendents and those of the heirlooms,    as well as striving to ensure an overall equity that would preserve the mutual    understanding and communion of this inheriting generation. For her, separated    many years ago from her original Protestant faith, it was a crucial and serious    task to complete as her life drew to an end. </font></p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">As the manager    of her family memory, this informant's case typifies how a specific conjunctural    intensity may be concentrated in family figures that Myriam Lins de Barros calls    'memory guardians' (1989). This is generally a privilege afforded women who    are entrusted with the functions of an informal moral priesthood in our culture.    The same author describes various aspects of these functions among elderly women    from the middle and upper classes, including public reverberations within the    Catholic Church, which can be described by categories imbued with a religious    flavour such as 'mission' or 'witnessing' (Lins de Barros 1980, 1987 and 1989).</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">The concentration    of such feelings in a determined physical locus may provoke actual pilgrimages,    whether occasional or systematic, individual or collective. Among the elite    class, we encounter frequent reports of families who periodically gather at    traditional properties during the holiday season or to celebrate important rites    of passage among their members. Meanwhile, among the middle classes, visits    may occasionally be made to places of origin (houses, neighbourhoods, towns    and cities, and so on) during which one generation attempts to pass on and thereby    preserve this point of reference to the next generation. For many families,    this role is confined to family tombs, the object of sporadic or regular visits    and grave tending.<a href="#_ftn14" name="_ftnref14" title=""><sup>14</sup></a></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">The search to maintain    communion and reverence for a shared pantheon is the motive for very common    strategies among adult generations in terms of interacting with their descendents,    stimulating the repetition of edifying stories and training younger people's    attention on certain objects or themes. This involves a far-reaching didactics    on how to adopt a reverential attitude, whether concentrating more on the topics    of physical inheritance or moral inheritance. The transmission of moral qualities    is especially revealing of the sacred nature of these family legacies, precisely    due to their greater abstraction and their ethical and behavioural dimension    (see Lins de Barros 1989:36). These nodules of moral inheritance, sometimes    dependent on a physical medium, are the object of a particular reverence, eliciting    frequent rituals of invocation and vehement recollections. This is particularly    notable in cases where the characteristics of these personal or behavioural    traits contain an element of class distinction capable of being emphasized.<a href="#_ftn15" name="_ftnref15" title=""><sup>15</sup></a> The confirmation of the effective inheritance of phenomena    such as a refined artistic taste, a pronounced sporting bent, a recognized intellectual    value or even a positive property of bodily hexis (such as elegance, for example)    may comprise a focus of intense identification among subjects, the guarantee    of a transcendent communion across time. Many small rituals may arise from this    valorization, celebrating the continuity of communion and reverence. Frequenting    certain social environments in specific circumstances (such as making a special    point of attending Mozart concertos, because that was “what my grandmother most    enjoyed,” or dining at certain restaurants or eating a particular dish, because    that “was what daddy did on his birthday”) looks to perpetuate the intensity    of feelings and values invested in these situations. </font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">As Durkheim foresaw    in relation to religion in the strict sense, this family religiosity includes    various forms of negative or positive cults. The feelings of reverence and communion    can be lived as painful and harmful experiences, a heavy burden to be assumed    only on ceremonial occasions or one which should be denounced and exorcised.    A potential informant, the brother of one of the people most intensely devoted    to expounding the value of family memory, practically refused to give an interview,    explaining that he was unwilling to go over these topics again, 'tired' as he    was of dealing with the ancestral inheritance. Informal observation revealed    that, in fact, he was immersed in a painfully intimate communion with the family    pantheon, surrounded by physical memorabilia and impregnated with signs of his    moral heritage.<a href="#_ftn16" name="_ftnref16" title=""><sup>16</sup></a></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Avoiding or prohibiting    this sacred dimension of the family is frequently associated with the emphasis    on creating a new life, an acquired autonomy being preferable here to traditional    attribution. This idea is consonant with the individualist emphasis of modern    western culture, itself an heir to the Christian emphasis on individual salvation    and acquiring the status of a believer in contrast to the continuity of ecclesiastical    affiliation.<a href="#_ftn17" name="_ftnref17" title=""><sup>17</sup></a> As    in the Christian tradition and the identity practices of western societies,    this is a point of creative tension within an ongoing interplay between individual    performance and ancestral inheritance. Modern psychotherapeutic practices are    a key space for attempting to resolve this tension, both at the level of encompassing    theories and at the level of the representations of patients and lay people.    Various contemporary therapeutic forms, more or less psychologized, are explicitly    dedicated to working through the subject's relationship with his or her family    past. The psychoanalytic currents more directly associated with Freud's theories    tend to encompass this theme within a wider vision, integrating it within the    psychic dynamic in which other kernels of meaning possess an equal weight. Systemic    therapies and so-called transgenerational psychoanalysis (TTG) tend to focus    more on this point, producing a veritable theory and strategy for exorcising    family memory. In the latter strand of therapy, the notions of 'ghost' and 'crypt'    are crucial, associated with the search for and placation of unconscious and    malignant identificatory bonds with ancestors (see Abraham &amp; Torok 1987).<a href="#_ftn18" name="_ftnref18" title=""><sup>18</sup></a></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">It is highly significant    that the language of denunciation and exorcism applied to the family legacy    also appears in specific areas of the contemporary religious field, such as    the case of the cult of the Saint Joseph Group in Porto Alegre, analyzed by    Carlos Steil. In this movement, an example of charismatic Catholicism, the therapeutic    action of the Holy Spirit is invoked to dispel the inheritance of family ghosts    crystallized in the subject during his or her foetal state (Steil 2006). As    I highlighted in another text, there is a notable similarity between the images    used by transgenerational psychoanalysis and by this religious cult to describe    the determinant, magical and malign character of a certain type of family inheritance    (Duarte <i>et al</i>. 2006).<a href="#_ftn19" name="_ftnref19" title=""><sup>19</sup></a></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">The sacrality of    the family is expressed here in the guise of negative and sombre feelings, similar    to those encountered in explicitly religious universes. We also find sacrileges,    blasphemies and profanities, recurrently denounced by the ideologues of the    modern family, policed by civil legislation and churned over in the public imagination.    Alongside the more traditional themes of incest, adultery and venereal contamination    (today, HIV/Aids especially), there are the more contemporary themes of paedophilia    and intradomestic violence. Given that the imagery of incest today primarily    assumes the form of paedophiliac behaviour, we should note that the risk of    profanation has shifted even more clearly to the interior of domestic sacrality    (see Barreto 2003 for a thought-provoking analysis of the incest theme in cinema    productions).</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Among the types    of positive cult analyzed by Durkheim and encountered here are sacrifice and    expiatory rites. However, these retain some of the traits of negative cults    since their emphasis on pain and suffering means they go beyond simply enjoying    the intensity of communion and reverence. The evocation of the latter allows    us to highlight the extent to which family cults (even in cases which seem to    be more positive) depend on negative feelings whose involuntary presence or    stimulated cultivation makes up the sacred environment. Preoccupation, nostalgia    and a yearning for the past (<i>saudade</i>) are recurring terms in the description    of these phenomena, making them even more vivid and intense. The imagery of    sacrifice is constant, whether as an act of the revered or as an experience    of the informants themselves. Family communion is founded on a persistent imaginary    of unequal exchange, the constant 'sacrifices' to be made at the altar of reproducing    a shared identity. Inevitably, the accumulation of sacrificial offerings frequently    results in a negative balance, explicitly evoked in the records of negative    cults.<a href="#_ftn20" name="_ftnref20" title=""><sup>20</sup></a> A group photograph in which one of the images has been    cut out and eliminated or a particular effort to remember to send out prayers    at the commemorative mass for the anniversary of someone's death provide dramatic    examples of the emergence of expiatory rites of avoidance or placation, designed    to express or compensate for the onerous negative feelings also present in family    relations. One informant revealed that he prayed positively for various dead    family members and negatively (in the sense of seeking to neutralize a possible    malefic influence) for a particular ancestor with whom – nonetheless – he had    always officially got on very well.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">As the literature    has repeatedly shown (see Csordas 1997:25 for instance), modern religiosity    has tended to distance itself from traditional Christian suffering and absorbed    a hedonistic 'mundanization' associated with the all-pervasive 'naturalism'    (Duarte <i>et al</i>. 2006). The same applies to family religiosity. A complex    and lengthy shift means that today – especially among the middle and upper classes    – the stress has fallen on ensuring the 'satisfaction' of members of the family    unit, both individually and collectively. My informants from these social classes    describe the enormous efforts taken to create an elated communion and frequently    contrast the result with the 'heavy atmosphere' of the households in which they    grew up or which they knew in their childhood. The feeling of reverence is therefore    produced through celebrating the idea that a pleasurable communion is being    shared, one cultivated and confirmed by innumerable small rituals. Photos of    family gatherings in which all (or nearly all) the participants are smiling    are a striking ethnographic recurrence. The marked intensity of this communion    is associated primarily with positive feelings, therefore, even if they are    neither permanent nor prevalent. The ideology of 'love' in all its intrafamily    variants provides a constant argumentative underpinning to these processes.    In many circumstances there lurks a peculiar ambiguity between suffering and    hedonism, such as, for example, in the references to the sacrifices necessary    to maintain domestic bliss.</font></p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="3"><b>5. The differential    modalities of the family cult</b></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">The mode in which    this religiosity is manifest in modern western culture undoubtedly varies along    a wide variety of axes. One of the most famous is that of age class, a phenomenon    my investigation amply confirmed. It is elderly informants who most explicitly    refer to family life as surrounded with the halo of particular values, this    peculiar intensity of sacred things. In one sense, this clearly derives from    the growing depth of their life experience and consequent accumulation of a    relational memory, reinforced by their habitual role of acting as the mediating    generation between ascendants and descendents. At the same time, the approach    of the end of the life-cycle also contributes – in an explicit way for many    informants – to putting in focus the person's position in relation to his or    her transgenerational network. Although I met some younger people (across all    social classes) with a particular sensitivity and reverence towards family memory,    on the whole they maintain a considerable distance from the inherited dimension    of this experience, partly due to the challenges of building new families combined    with constructing more or less individualized personal careers.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Two generational    events appear explicitly in numerous life stories as the stimulus for special    attention to the feelings of family communion and reverence: the birth of a    couple's first child and the death of parents.<a href="#_ftn21" name="_ftnref21" title=""><sup>21</sup></a> Many systematic collections of family memorabilia are    started following the birth of children, whether encouraged by preceding generations    or not. Numerous mundane elements of this rite of passage demand renewed attention    to family communion from a large pool of subjects, including the need to choose    the child's name (both the forename and the surname, due to the flexibility    in Brazilian customs relating to the latter), having to face the inevitable    remarks on the physical likeness of the newborn to his or her relatives, the    need to manage the intensified contacts between the kindreds of the new parents,    or the decision on whether or not to submit the infant to a form of religious    initiation. Above all, there is the transformation in the parents' status following    the birth: the promotion to a higher level in the generational sequence imposes    a different perspective on the relational complex in which they previously found    themselves in the form of a social youthfulness.<a href="#_ftn22" name="_ftnref22" title=""><sup>22</sup></a></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">The death of a    parent introduces another level of identity transformations, projecting subjects    towards the experience of the inevitable final stage of their own life-cycle.    Here too a series of everyday properties connected to the event demands special    attention to family communion and reverence, particularly including the need    to gather and pass on the family inheritance (however simple this may be). Disposing    of the physical remains of the dead, the form of burial and the decision that    sometimes has to be made on whether to hold some kind of religious ritual, reinforce    the emergence of a special dedication to communion and reverence. In various    observed situations, it is only after this event that a more explicit family    cult really emerges, whether making use of overt religious formulas or otherwise.    This is a period that can provoke or reinforce direct adherence to a religious    faith, associated with a variety of ideas on the post-mortem destiny of the    dead or the subjects themselves.<a href="#_ftn23" name="_ftnref23" title=""><sup>23</sup></a></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Another fundamental    criterion working to differentiate these representations is gender. In terms    of the family and religion alike, it is women who are presented as socially    responsible. This idea traverses the social classes, although specific pockets    of male dedication occur in all of them as a result of other variables, the    main one being an intense and recent religious conversion. This – on the other    hand – precisely tends to eclipse the explicitation of family religiosity in    itself. </font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">The same hypotheses    that seek to explain the proximity between religion and family in our culture    can be evoked in relation to the proximity between the two fields and the female    gender. Here too I prefer to emphasize the critical role played by women's association    with a fundamental social and cosmological relationality. A fairly widely explored    theme is the individuating (if not individualizing) and fluid properties of    male careers in contrast to the encompassing and stabilizing properties of female    identity (Heilborn 2004). Among working class sectors, this correlation takes    an even clearer form due to the association of women with the world of moral    reproduction in general in contrast to men's association with the physical world    (Duarte 1986). As far as family religiosity is concerned, one of the points    that distinguishes female from male experiences is the more systematic nature    of women's attitudes. Men frequently express the feelings of communion and reverence    described here, but they tend to be less dedicated than women to the cult and    cultivation of the ritual forms and formulas. A notable ethnographic case is    the large Mexican elite family studied by Lomnitz &amp; Perez-Lizaur (1987):    the women of the family, even when they were the more direct heirs, had no participation    in the economic activities responsible for reproducing the family fortune. Instead,    they spent their time managing the intense social life that allowed the family    to maintain its overall social status. This social life can be read as a constant    sequence of rituals designed to consecrate family communion and reverence, sometimes    exposed  in ceremonial form to the gaze of wider society.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Combining with    gender, the person's sibling position can also influence their degree of affiliation    to family religiosity. A particular onus falls on the figure of the oldest sister,    regularly given the responsibility for an all-encompassing moral representativeness.    This role may be assumed from an early age in contexts where the family's mother's    role is weakened, increasing further after the death of the latter. The sibling    position may lead to the formation of parallel lineages that corporately inherit    properties from their founder. As a result, the descendents of the oldest sister    (or, sometimes, brother) inherit part of the matriarch's moral responsibility    over the family group. This is particularly notable among the working classes    where living in close physical proximity (and hence knowledge and control of    each member's behaviour) are more common due to the prevailing residence patterns    (Duarte 1986; Guedes 1998). One family observed in my fieldwork presented a    pronounced split in its religious affiliation following the emergence of two    opposing lineages from an original group of siblings: the youngest brother's    lineage ended up converting to Pentecostalism after the death of the matriarch,    in contrast to the overt Catholicism of the lineage of the elder brother, whose    pre-eminence in the family had passed uncontested until then. Interestingly,    this brother – a rare example of a male figure assuming responsibility for the    family's moral life – always speaks devoutly of their only sister who died young    and whose role of moral administration he apparently inherited. His reverence    for this figure – whose first name prompted his choice of protective saint –    is extremely intense, the themes of her brief life comprising a motif to which    the family's descendents continually return hagiographically. </font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Certain phenomenal    differences may lead to the emphasis on the matrilateral or patrilateral legacy.    The ideology of bilateral inheritance is a structuring factor, but the specificity    of family life tends to impose a hierarchy between the two ascendant sides.    A patrilateral emphasis has traditionally pervaded western culture due to the    hierarchical pre-eminence of the male element in social structure. However,    this emphasis always cohabited with the possibility of affirming the maternal    line, which may even become predominant in some domains and certain social situations.    This inequality is particularly important in the religious field due to the    female privilege in terms of dealing with the sacred and tends to be expressed    in family religiosity in the form of a matrilateral emphasis, especially among    the working classes.<a href="#_ftn24" name="_ftnref24" title=""><sup>24</sup></a> This privilege may result in a greater    enrichment of the matrilateral <i>sacra</i>, since daughters tend to inherit    the family's moral heirlooms, the latter themselves already imbued with this    privilege from the previous generation. The situation is obviously different    in terms of substantial legacies, especially urban properties where the official    egalitarianism becomes more dominant, or in the case of public legacies (such    as companies, offices, consultancies, libraries, archives, etc.) where the male    gender tends to predominate.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">At various points,    I have referred to the social class as an important criterion in terms of recognizing    the differences in contemporary forms of family religiosity. These differences    are indeed discernible at various levels. We can distinguish a first dimension,    more properly cultural, ideological or moral, through the lesser or greater    presence of individualizing rationalization among the various social sectors,    layers or classes. The weight and style of family relationality thereby increase    as a differential factor.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">A difference in    the forms of family sociability is a second crucial factor. The size and extent    of nuclear families, the age of parents when their first child was born, the    degree of physical proximity of family networks, the intensity of mutual help    within the family group, and the degree of privacy in household life all contribute    to the construction of very distinct family feelings, a fact inevitably reflected    in the organization of family devotion and worship.</font></p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Thirdly, we should    not underestimate the importance of the material capital owned by members of    different classes, since it serves as the basis of a highly diverse interplay    of values, especially in terms of transgenerational transmission and the possibilities    for pursuing individualizing careers (see Pina-Cabral &amp; Pedroso de Lima    2005). </font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">I am    convinced, nonetheless, that it is the first dimension which more closely conditions    the contemporary forms of family communion and reverence. This effectively involves    the representation of personal identity in terms of the determinations of family    attribution. The process of individualization imposes a basic experiential distance    in relation to the family of origin (and even, in some cases, the new family    – whose constitution may even be rejected) meaning that the family cult assumes    much more rarefied, non-explicit and unconscious forms. Full individualization    presumes, however, the development of a concomitant interiorization, which enables    greater reflexivity and mental elaboration of the relation to self and to the    family. The interpretative and therapeutic resources made available by psychological    knowledge are primarily directed at the subjects of this type of reflexivity,    strengthening the dialogue with the family legacy and provoking the emergence    of a particularly paradoxical type of cult (one which can assume more positive    or negative tones): namely, that of family memory as a site for a form of psychic    work aimed at consolidating subjective identity. Individualization also has    implications in terms of differences in expressivity – that is, the willingness    and capacity to talk about oneself (and, in terms of what interests us here,    to talk with and about ones family) – which interferes in the viability and    organization of the family cult, as well as the production of explicit discourses    on this private dimension in response to the researcher's questions.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">It is unsurprising,    therefore, that the forms of family religiosity among the working classes are    closer to religion in the strict sense of the term, given the limited presence    of the lay language (including psychologization) with its abundant and articulate    resources for expressing these feelings. In compensation, the transit between    ecclesiastical sacrality and family sacrality allows a greater wealth of phenomenal    form, only touched on here in this text. It can also be seen that among the    middle and elite classes the permanence or emergence of a explicitly religious    reverence tends to materialize in psychologized or psychologizing formulas,    such as the charismatic cult of the Saint Joseph Group, cited earlier, or various    others present in contemporary Christian religions (see Csordas 1997; Lewgoy    2005; Duarte &amp; Carvalho 2006).</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Additionally, the    reference faith of each family or subject acts as a considerable source of difference.    Even in cases where a secularized and disenchanted tendency is pronounced, some    reference to the religious space of origin and education always persists, even    if simply in blasphemous forms.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Catholic culture    is particularly abundant in symbolic resources for expressing family religiosity.    The way in which the Catholic pantheon is structured, with the incorporation    of a wide range of mediators, facilitates the connection between ecclesiastical    beings and family series (such as the lay 'little saints' mentioned earlier).    In this case, the presence of images representing the sacred is essential, in    particular since these also allow a flow between ecclesiastical and family <i>sacra</i>.    I personally saw – and many informants described – the arrangement of small    domestic altars, generally fairly informal, where ecclesiastical imagery and    <i> mana</i> objects (such as holy palms, rosaries, medals and votive candles)    were mixed with family items. The very boundary between familial and transcendental    was blurred thanks to the presence of personalized patron saints, printed texts    with favourite prayers or inherited images.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">The representation    of a Holy Family in which various divine or semi-divine personae maintain mythical    kinship relationships enables a continual elaboration of the correlations between    the sacred and the earthly family. The filial devotion to the Holy Father and    the Virgin Mary is clearly correlated with the devotion for ones earthly father    and mother though the Catholic custom – frequently mentioned – of making children    refer to the former by affectionate names such as 'heavenly father' and 'heavenly    mother.' The Church's official services various occasions for paying homage    to ancestors, such as the masses in suffrage of the dead (<i>corpo presente</i>,    the seventh day, month, year and so on) or for saving souls in Purgatory, not    forgetting the family dimensions of the Day of the Dead and the celebration    of Christmas. As one middle class family recalled, rites have even been created    for sacralizing domestic space, such as the 'enthroning' of a sacred image in    a prominent position in the home. </font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">For the upper middle    classes and elite, the reference to the Catholic Church is essential in all    important rites of passage in family life, meaning that the boundary between    the two dimensions becomes indiscernible: baptism, first communion, marriage,    wedding anniversaries. Given the high rate of religious de-institutionalization    prevalent in these sectors, it is notably more common for the feelings surrounding    family religiosity to prevail over the ecclesiastical religious dimensions.    Something similar also occurs among Jewish sectors in relation to the equivalent    series of family rites.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">These more experiential    dimensions of the Catholic world should not blind us to the fact that, from    the Church's viewpoint, the family possesses a more essential and abstract value,    making it the object of continuous references in doctrinal texts and pastoral    practices. Here the sacralization of the nuclear family is clearly defined through    the specific coupling between points of religious doctrine and the reference    to the 'naturalness' of this social form. In all cases, what predominates is    praise for the feelings of internal communion and reverence, as well as the    stimulus given for its continued practice.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">This latter, more    ethical dimension takes us to the Protestant universe whose empirical complexity    is greater, divided into extremely varied alternatives. Generally speaking,    Protestantism's lack of the relational resources and imagery of Catholicism    is compensated by an intensification in its ethical orientation focused on cultivating    the family. A crucial difference in relation to the Catholic universe is the    pre-eminence of congregational life, which engages a much more direct and effective    control over the modes of constructing personal and family careers. The exemplarity    of family life becomes richer in a universe where ministers can marry. The minister's    family is an important part of this configuration, contributing even more strongly    to an ideal imaginary link between the believer's family and the congregation.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">I have already    cited Christiano's contribution (2000) to our understanding of the historical    development of what the author calls 'domestic Christianity' in the 19<sup>th</sup>    century United States. This involved precisely a strong sacralization of domestic    life taking place initially in the Protestant universe where the key factor    is not so much a specific religious doctrine but rather the emphasis on the    communion of individual worship in relation to the divine within the family    context.<a href="#_ftn25" name="_ftnref25" title=""><sup>25</sup></a> The significance    of Thanksgiving Day in the USA clearly expresses this configuration, creating    a bridge between 'domestic Christianity' and the 'civic religion' described    by Bellah.<a href="#_ftn26" name="_ftnref26" title=""><sup>26</sup></a> Christiano    also calls our attention to the intensified family inclination of some of the    denominations emergent in the Protestant context, such as the Mormons and Jehovah's    Witnesses. Here family life is considered to be literally a part of the sacred    dimension of human experience and surrounded, therefore, by specific ethical    and ecclesiastical controls.</font></p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">The last large    religious complex directly present in my field of research is that of Kardecist    or spiritualist religiosity. As I discussed earlier, the permanent communication    between the earthly and spiritual worlds stimulates an extremely rich elaboration    of family sacrality, constantly reconstructed through interpretations on the    reincarnation of dead relatives into newborn relatives, or commemorated in the    dialogue with the disembodied family. This flux also enables the incorporation    of people into family communion and reverence without a terrestrial family tie:    the recognition that they are the reincarnation of a dead family member also    makes them kin (Mazur 2006).</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Afro-Brazilian    religiosity appears only obliquely in my research, although it would certainly    afford a systematic discussion of other assemblages of institutional and family    religiosity, particularly in a sacred context where the ideas of family and    kinship have structuring cosmological and sociological implications. An analysis    of the universe would, though, go beyond the very general aims of this article.</font></p>     <p align=center><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"><b>*    * *</b></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">The exploration    of the theme of the 'home sanctuary' in this article has looked to dislocate    the conventional boundaries of the grand themes of sociological knowledge. Neither    the family nor religion are substantial or stable entities; they are culturally    established and analytically stabilized cuttings applied to a concrete experience    that shifts permanently in response to a complex causality, a permanent challenge    to models and regimes of knowledge. At the present moment, I have preferred    to adopt a generalizing approach, capable of drawing attention to the wider    analytic point, rather than pursue a deeper understanding of the specific ways    in which my research material has challenged me to produce new interpretative    schemas. In the narrow field of studies on family and religion, continuing to    repeat the formula of one institution influencing the other will not get us    very far – unless as the expression of native ideologies, which are precisely    those in need of interpretation. We need to understand both generically and    specifically how these dimensions overlap in social experience, delimiting  the    essence of a single moral field where the subjects of our contemporary societies    are reproduced.</font></p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="3"><b>References</b></font></p>     <!-- ref --><p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">ABRAHAM, Nicolas    &amp; TOROK, Maria. (1987), <i>L'écorce et le noyau</i>. Paris: Flammarion.    </font></p>     <!-- ref --><p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">ARAÚJO, Ricardo    B. (1987), “A fonte da juventude – Observações sobre a Europa de hoje de Alceu    Amoroso Lima”. <i>Religião e Sociedade</i>, vol.14, n.3: 72-98.    </font></p>     ]]></body>
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<body><![CDATA[<!-- ref --><p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">GOETHE, Johann    W. (1986), <i>Memórias: Poesia e verdade (Aus meinem Leben. Dichtung und Wahrheit)</i>.    Brasília: UnB/Hucitec.    </font></p>     <!-- ref --><p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">GUEDES, Simoni    Lahud. (1998), “Redes de parentesco e consideração entre trabalhadores urbanos:    tecendo relações a partir dos <i>quintais</i>”. <i>Cadernos do CRH</i>, 29:    189-208.    </font></p>     <!-- ref --><p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">HEILBORN, Maria    Luiza. (2004), <i>Dois é par: Gênero e identidade sexual em contexto igualitário</i>.    Rio de Janeiro: Garamond.    </font></p>     <!-- ref --><p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">HOGGART, Richard.    (1973), <i>As utilizações da cultura</i>. Lisbon: Presença.    </font></p>     <!-- ref --><p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">JABOR, Juliana.    (2006), “A prática do amor e o amor prático. Identidade e sentimentos em uma    família religiosa de classe média”.<i> </i>In: L.F.D. Duarte <i>et al</i>. (eds.).<i>    Família e religião</i>. Rio de Janeiro: ContraCapa.    </font></p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<!-- ref --><p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">JAMES, William.    (1958), <i>The varieties of religious experience. A study in human nature.</i>    The New American Library.    </font></p>     <!-- ref --><p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">LEITE, Miriam L.M.    (1993), <i>Retratos de família – Leitura da fotografia histórica</i>. São Paulo:    Edusp/Fapesp.    </font></p>     <!-- ref --><p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">LÉVI-STRAUSS, Claude.    (1970), “A eficácia simbólica”. In: C. Lévi-Strauss. <i>Antropologia estrutural</i>.    Rio de Janeiro: Tempo Brasileiro.    </font></p>     <!-- ref --><p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">LEWGOY, Bernardo.    (2005), “Estilos de vida e modelos de construção de pessoa na recente literatura    evangélica”. Caxambu: Comunicação ao <i>XXIX Encontro Anual da ANPOCS</i>.    </font></p>     <!-- ref --><p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">LINS DE BARROS,    Myriam M. (1980), <i>Testemunhos de vida. Um estudo antropológico de mulheres    na velhice</i>. Rio de Janeiro: Master's Dissertation in Social Anthropology,    PPGAS/ Museu Nacional/ UFRJ.    </font></p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<!-- ref --><p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">LINS DE BARROS,    Myriam M. (1987), <i>Autoridade e afeto</i>. Rio de Janeiro: Zahar.    </font></p>     <!-- ref --><p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">LINS DE BARROS,    Myriam M. (1989), “Memória e família”. <i>Estudos Históricos</i>, vol.2, n.3:    29-42.    </font></p>     <!-- ref --><p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">LOMNITZ, Larissa    Adler &amp; PEREZ-LIZAUR, Marisol. (1987), <i>A Mexican elite family, 1820-    1980. Kinship, class, and culture</i>. Princeton: Princeton Universtiy Press.    </font></p>     <!-- ref --><p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">LUNA, Naara. (2005),    “Natureza humana criada em laboratório: biologização e genetização do parentesco    nas novas tecnologias reprodutivas”. <i>História, Ciência, Saúde – Manguinhos</i>,    12: 395-417.    </font></p>     <!-- ref --><p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">MAITRE, Jacques.    (1996), <i>L'Orpheline de la Bérésina. Paris: CERF.    </i></font></p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<!-- ref --><p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">MAZUR, Evangelina    (2006), “Família e laços familiares em um contexto espiritualista”.<i> </i>In:    L.F.D. Duarte <i>et al</i>. (eds.).<i> Família e religião</i>. Rio de Janeiro:    ContraCapa.    </font></p>     <!-- ref --><p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">MENEZES, Rachel    Aisengart. (2004), <i>Em busca da boa morte: antropologia dos cuidados paliativos</i>.    Rio de Janeiro: Garamond/ Fiocruz.    </font></p>     <!-- ref --><p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">MINTZ, Sidney.    (1964), <i>Worker in the cane – A Puerto Rican life history</i>.<i> </i>New    Haven: Yale University Press.    </font></p>     <!-- ref --><p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">MUXEL, Anne. (1996),    <i>Individu et mémoire familiale</i>. Paris: Nathan.    </font></p>     <!-- ref --><p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">PEIXOTO, Clarice    E. (2000), <i>Envelhecimento e imagem: as fronteiras entre Paris e Rio de Janeiro</i>.    São Paulo: Annablume.    </font></p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<!-- ref --><p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">PINA-CABRAL, João    &amp; PEDROSO DE LIMA, Antónia. (2005), “Como fazer uma história de família:    um exercício de contextualização social”. <i>Etnográfica</i> IX (2): 355-388.    </font></p>     <!-- ref --><p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">PINÇON, Michel    &amp; PINÇON-CHARLOT, Monique. (1989), <i>Dans les Beaux Quartiers</i>. Paris:    Seuil.    </font></p>     <!-- ref --><p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">PONCIANO, Edna    T. &amp; FERES-CARNEIRO, Terezinha. (2003), “Modelos de família e intervenção    terapêutica”. <i>Interações: Estudos e pesquisas em psicologia</i>, VIII: 57-80.    </font></p>     <!-- ref --><p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">SALEM, Tania. (1987),    <i>Sobre o casal grávido. Incursão em um universo ético</i>. Rio de Janeiro:    Doctoral Thesis, PPGAS/ Museu Nacional/ UFRJ.    </font></p>     <!-- ref --><p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">SCHNEIDER, David.    (1968), <i>American kinship: a cultural account</i>. New Jersey: Prentice-Hall.    </font></p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<!-- ref --><p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">STEIL, Carlos.    (2006), “Os demônios geracionais. A herança dos antepassados em um contexto    católico carismático”.<i> </i>In: L.F.D. Duarte <i>et al</i>. (eds.).<i> Família    e religião</i>. Rio de Janeiro: ContraCapa.    </font></p>     <!-- ref --><p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">STRATHERN, Marilyn.    (1992), <i>After nature: English kinship in the late twentieth century</i>.    Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.    </font></p>     <!-- ref --><p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">TAUSSIG, Michael.    (1980), <i>The devil and commodity fetishism in South America</i>. Chapel Hill:    The University of North Carolina Press.    </font></p>     <!-- ref --><p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">THACKER, Christopher.    (1979), <i>The history of gardens</i>. Berkeley: University of California Press.    </font></p>     <!-- ref --><p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">VELHO, Gilberto.    (1998), <i>Nobres &amp; anjos: um estudo de tóxicos e hierarquia</i>. Rio de    Janeiro: FGV.    </font></p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<!-- ref --><p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">VIVEIROS DE CASTRO,    Eduardo &amp; ARAÚJO, Ricardo B. (1977), “Romeu e Julieta e a origem do Estado”.    In: G. Velho (ed.). <i>Arte e sociedade</i>. Rio de Janeiro: Zahar.    </font></p>     <!-- ref --><p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">WEBER, Max. (1968),    <i>The religion of China. Confucianism and Taoism</i>. New York: Free Press.    </font></p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"><a href="#_ftnref1" name="_ftn1" title="">1</a>    <a href="mailto:lfdduarte@uol.com.br">lfdduarte@uol.com.br</a> / <a href="mailto:lfdduarte@mn.ufrj.br">lfdduarte@mn.ufrj.br    <br>   </a>Avenida Osvaldo Cruz, 103 / 303    <br>   Flamengo, Rio de Janeiro    <br>   22250-060 Brazil    ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<br>   Tels.  (55) (21) - 2554 6198 / 9607 0794 / 2568 9642 ex. 207    <br>   <a href="#_ftnref2" name="_ftn2" title="">2</a> Even for William James, however,    despite his basic empiricism, religion “is a total reaction of a man to life”    (1995:31).    <br>   <a href="#_ftnref3" name="_ftn3" title="">3</a> The trail is briefly picked up by Lévi-Strauss in his celebrated    reference to the fact that “in mechanical civilization there is no longer any    room for mythical time, except within man himself” (1970:224). On the other    hand, this observation comprises one of the pillars of Louis Dumont's analysis    of individualism as a structuring ideology in western culture (see especially    Dumont 1985). In the same direction, see too Duarte 1983.    <br>   <a href="#_ftnref4" name="_ftn4" title="">4</a> A recent and fascinating example is the analysis made by Naara    Luna of the ideas on contemporary assisted reproductive technologies (ARTs),    which provide a paradigmatic enactment of the dilemmas of blood and individual    will (Luna 2005).    <br>   <a href="#_ftnref5" name="_ftn5" title="">5</a> This is not a case of returning to affective theories of the religious    after opting for Durkheim's cognitive theory. Here we are dealing with the expressive    properties of religiosity in modern western culture, probably in resistance    and contrast to the cosmological shifts arising from the dominant rationalization    and equalization (or 'flattening') of the world.    <br>   <a href="#_ftnref6" name="_ftn6" title="">6</a> The idea of reverence should not be confused with that of contrition.    Reverence is an interior valorative disposition that may become manifest in    contrite and controlled or exuberant and dramatic form.    <br>   <a href="#_ftnref7" name="_ftn7" title="">7</a> This intensity is explicitly evoked by Durkheim as part of the    'excitement' provoked by the feeling of collectivity <i>in actu</i> and performed    in religious ritual (1968). The affective force of the 'ideal' in Durkheim can    also be detected in the return to the sacred in the guise of '<i>mana</i>' in    Mauss or the 'floating signifier' in Lévi-Strauss. William James also refers    to something similar in the form of a <i>more</i> which produces the difference    in intensity (James 1958:384-5).    <br>   <a href="#_ftnref8" name="_ftn8" title="">8</a> 20<sup>th</sup> century cinema also worked this tradition, offering    innumerable fine explorations of the relationship between family and individual,    evident in the work of Visconti, Bergman, Saura, Woody Allen, Louis Malle and    many others.    <br>   <a href="#_ftnref9" name="_ftn9" title="">9</a> The use of categories of close kinship, associated with the household    unit, is notorious in terms of designating Christianity's sacerdotal and institutional    positions (father, mother, <i>Papa</i>, Pope, <i>sóror</i>, <i>frade</i>, sister,    brother, abbot, etc.), reiterating at a mundane level the imagery of paternity,    affiliation and fraternity prevalent in the representation of Christ's divinity.    This category shift was particularly accentuated in monachism as a result of    its desire to build a world 'outside the world,' including – and indeed especially    – as an alternative to the terrestrial family.    <br>   <a href="#_ftnref10" name="_ftn10" title="">10</a> A striking example is that of the devotional history of Saint    Theresa of Lisieux, in which an intense parallelism between the earthly and    divine family occurs at every moment, particularly in the highly maternalizing    visions of the Virgin, Christ and the oldest nuns themselves (Maître 1996).    ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<br>   <a href="#_ftnref11" name="_ftn11" title="">11</a> The historical description of the emergence of intradomestic comfort    allows us to correlate this element – as a kind of compensation – with the relative    disenchantment of religious churches that occurred with the Reformation in northern    Europe. An entire aesthetic and liturgy relating to the arrangement of domestic    space developed from this point, becoming an obligatory theme of modern social    life: interior decoration. The phenomenon can be traced back to the shift from    the erudite picturesque representations of sacred or mythological figures and    themes to the representation of individualized portraits and scenes of family    life (the well-known 'conversation pieces' of the 18<sup>th</sup> century).    In some national cultures, such as England's, this family cult centred in particular    on the cultivation of domestic gardens, formally heirs of the convent gardens,    the <i>hortus conclusus</i> (cf. Thacker 1979). For a correlate analysis relating    to the decorative use of flowers in ecclesiastical and domestic space, also    see Blacker 2000. The ideology of the cosy home ('home sweet home') pervaded    English society as a whole, as recorded in Richard Hoggart's fine monograph    on the English working classes in the 20<sup>th</sup> century (1973).    <br>   <a href="#_ftnref12" name="_ftn12" title="">12</a> In two of the family archives I consulted there were 'santinhos'    (small prints with images of Catholic saints and ritual devotional formulas)    containing the photograph of a dead family member where the saint would usually    be. On the back, instead of the usual prayer or invocation, there was the phrase:    “Remember So-and-So in your prayers,” often followed by the birth and death    dates of the person and a small citation from a canonical sacred text.    <br>   <a href="#_ftnref13" name="_ftn13" title="">13</a> Here it is worth recalling how the inheritance of family recipe    books and of specific cooking dispositions by one of the branches descending    from a upper bourgeois Mexican family became its most distinctive and positive    feature in a context of growing social differentiation that threatened the feelings    of corporate communion (Lomnitz &amp; Perez-Lizaur 1987).    <br>   <a href="#_ftnref14" name="_ftn14" title="">14</a> A general survey here should also include the complex    feelings associated in Brazil with 'trips to Europe.' These involve both the    idea of visiting an originary locus of family roots and the originary locus    of the most sacred values of each subject. For many informants, the first trip    to Europe or the first long stay are moments of particular intensity and reverence    due to the feeling of communion with the most profound and deep-rooted images    sustaining their identity. A revealing case is found in Araújo (1987), concerning    the 'pilgrimage' of Alceu Amoroso Lima to Europe. The theme has parallels in    the fascinating European thematic of journeys to Rome – and that which Freud    undertook at a certain point in his life provided him with a rich source of    reflections on the personal and familial symbolism involved.    <br>   <a href="#_ftnref15" name="_ftn15" title="">15</a> An important dimension of the class distinction in our culture    is precisely that of status being inherited in contrast to the democratic and    'vulgar' emphasis on acquired status (see for instance Velho 1998 &amp; Bourdieu    1979).    <br>   <a href="#_ftnref16" name="_ftn16" title="">16</a> Freud's work on the feeling of the 'uncanny' is    entirely pertinent here: in this text, he examines how the German expression    <i>das Unheimliche</i> contains the ideas of familiarity, intimacy and secrecy,    on one hand, and expresses the feeling of strangeness and hauntedness on the    other (1969-80).    <br>   <a href="#_ftnref17" name="_ftn17" title="">17</a> We can associate the ideological emphasis on 'acquisition' with    the <i>sick soul</i> of William James, the Protestant <i>rebirth</i> and the    models of 'divided self' in the formation of the modern western person. The    feeling of continuity and non-conflictual communion, on the other hand, is associated    with the <i>healthy-minded</i> religious attitude.    <br>   <a href="#_ftnref18" name="_ftn18" title="">18</a> Another interesting example is the 'family constellation' system    which seems to be related to systemic theory, Reichianism and transgenerational    psychoanalysis. Consulting the site <a href="http://www.constelacaofamiliar.com.br/" target="_blank">http://www.constelacaofamiliar.com.br/</a>    (accessed on 23/04/2006), we are informed that “family constellation is a technique    created by Bert Hellinger, a German psychotherapist, that operates through the    creation of 'living sculptures' reconstructing the genealogical tree, which    allows blockages in the flow of love from any generation or family member to    be located and removed. According to this approach, many personal difficulties    and relationship problems are the result of confusions in family systems. This    confusion occurs when the fate of another person, living or dead, is incorporated    into the subject's life without the latter being aware of the fact. As a result,    the fate of family members who were excluded, forgotten or unrecognized in the    place that belonged to them ends up being repeated.”    <br>   <a href="#_ftnref19" name="_ftn19" title="">19</a> Another example is the 'intergenerational    healing,' or 'healing of the family tree,' mentioned by Csordas (1997:43) as    some of the modalities of charismatic curing in the USA.    <br>   <a href="#_ftnref20" name="_ftn20" title="">20</a> The expiatory rites of the 'good death,' described in Rachel Menezes's    research on 'paliative hospitals,' include the theme of family pacification    to be carried out <i>in extremis</i> in the presence of family members (2004).    This amounts to attributing a positive spiritual quality to this transition.    ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<br>   <a href="#_ftnref21" name="_ftn21" title="">21</a> A less frequent case that motivates a particularly serious intensification    in reverential attitude is the death of a young descendent. The anomalous nature    of this relation between generation and death provoked a particular growth of    religiosity in the few cases that I find reported in my research. It should    be pointed out that two of the cases cited earlier of 'little saints' with images    of dead family members referred precisely to situations of this kind.    <br>   <a href="#_ftnref22" name="_ftn22" title="">22</a> This widely relational character of the birth of the first child    can be contrasted with the experience of the first pregnancy, which refers in    particular to the couple (see Salem 1987, for a radical case). In another direction,    Myriam Lins de Barros (1987) analyses a homologous effect of identity conversion    and accentuation of the intensity of family roles in the passage to the condition    of grandparents.    <br>   <a href="#_ftnref23" name="_ftn23" title="">23</a> In some cases, among middle class families, I found the representation    and expectation of the re-encounter of subjects with their parents after death.    These were not particularly religious informants and this belief was not based    on any explicit religious premise, although it was externalized with great emotion    and anxiety.    <br>   <a href="#_ftnref24" name="_ftn24" title="">24</a> An interesting case of a matrilineage in the middle class, with    explicit emphasis on the religious (including sacerdotal) heritage, is the Baptist    family studied by Jabor (2006).    <br>   <a href="#_ftnref25" name="_ftn25" title="">25</a> A figure/informant from the story-report by Truman Capote <i>In    cold blood</i> (1994) states the following about family prayer at the meal table:    “I don't see how anyone can sit down to table without wanting to bless it.”    <br>   <a href="#_ftnref26" name="_ftn26" title="">26</a> It is plausible to suppose that current lay family rites of Mother's    Day and Father's Day emerged in this context of US family religiosity. Native    ideas associate the two dates with events held in homage of a specific father    and  mother that ended up becoming generalized and recognized by the American    nation as a whole: Father's Day – invented by Sonora Luise in 1909, in Spokane,    Washington, and recognized officially in 1972; Mother's Day – invented by Anne    Jervis a short while before becoming official, in 1919.</font></p>      ]]></body><back>
<ref-list>
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<name>
<surname><![CDATA[ABRAHAM]]></surname>
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<source><![CDATA[L'écorce et le noyau]]></source>
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<article-title xml:lang="pt"><![CDATA[A fonte da juventude: Observações sobre a Europa de hoje de Alceu Amoroso Lima]]></article-title>
<source><![CDATA[Religião e Sociedade]]></source>
<year>1987</year>
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