In this Book
- The relic state: St Francis Xavier and the politics of ritual in Portuguese India
- Book
- 2016
- Published by: Manchester University Press
summary
This book is a study of the complex nature of colonial and missionary power in Portuguese India. Written as a historical ethnography, it explores the evolving shape of a series of Catholic festivals that took place throughout the duration of Portuguese colonial rule in Goa (1510–1961), and for which the centrepiece was the 'incorrupt' corpse of São Francisco Xavier (1506–52), a Spanish Basque Jesuit missionary-turned-saint. Using distinct genres of source materials produced over the long duree of Portuguese colonialism, the book documents the historical and visual transformation of Xavier’s corporeal ritualisation in death through six events staged at critical junctures between 1554 and 1961. Xavier’s very mutability as a religious, political and cultural symbol in Portuguese India will also suggest his continuing role as a symbol of Goa’s shared past (for both Catholics and Hindus) and in shaping Goa’s culturally distinct representation within the larger Indian nation-state.
Table of Contents
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- List of Figures
- p. viii
- General Editor's Introduction
- pp. ix-xi
- Acknowledgements
- pp. xzii-xiv
- 1. Introduction: the relic state
- pp. 1-26
- 2. Incorruption (1554)
- pp. 27-77
- 3. Canonization (1624)
- pp. 78-124
- 4. Secularization (1782)
- pp. 125-150
- 5. Resurrection (1859)
- pp. 151-189
- 6. Commemoration (1952)
- pp. 190-226
- Bibliography
- pp. 234-254
Additional Information
ISBN
9781526112170
Related ISBN(s)
9780719090615
MARC Record
OCLC
903283213
Pages
304
Launched on MUSE
2017-04-09
Language
English
Open Access
No