爱尔兰的方言天主教唤醒的女人

Religions Pub Date : 2024-07-22 DOI:10.3390/rel15070879
Sean Williams, Lillis Ó Laoire
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引用次数: 0

摘要

几个世纪以来,民间白话天主教与官方礼仪之间的关系各不相同。17 世纪末,爱尔兰被征服,反天主教禁令开始实施,神父的数量受到更多限制。随后,宗教活动集中在圣日和当地的圣地,包括治愈之井,其中许多都是献给圣人的。哀悼死者的妇女--"哭泣的妇女"--一直是死亡仪式的核心人物,她们之所以被称为 "哭泣的妇女",是因为她们通过声音和歌声来哀悼死者。我们将展示这些歌曲如何与半独立于官方教会规范而存在的深层边缘灵性相关,以及声音如何起到确立其地位的作用。在十九世纪末的天主教复兴中,这种形式被欧洲的崇拜模式所淘汰,但却在边缘地带持续存在,让我们得以了解它们之前的活力。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Vernacular Catholicism in Ireland: The Keening Woman
The relationship between popular vernacular Catholicism and the more official liturgical variety has varied over centuries. Following the subjugation of Ireland by the late 17th century, and the institution of anti-Catholic proscriptions, the number of priests available became more restricted. Religious observation subsequently centered on holy days and local sacred sites including healing wells, many of them dedicated to saints. Always central figures in death rituals, women who mourned the dead—“keening women”—were so called because they lamented the dead through a combination of voice and song. We will show how the songs relate to a deep liminal spirituality that existed semi-independently of official Church norms, and how the voice served to establish their position. In the Catholic revival of the late nineteenth century, such forms were ousted by European modes of worship, but persisted at the margins, allowing us insight into their previous vigor.
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