Parasites, Worms, and the Human Body in Religion and Culture

The fear of parasites – with their power to invade, infest, and transform the self – writhes and wriggles through cultures and religions across the globe, reflecting a very human revulsion of being invaded and consumed by both internal and external forces. However, in ancient China, the parasitic wa...

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Bibliographic Details
Contributors: Tadd, Misha (Editor) ; Gardenour, Brenda (Editor)
Format: Electronic Book
Language:English
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Published: New York Peter Lang Inc. , International Academic Publishers 2012
In:Year: 2012
Edition:1st, New ed
Standardized Subjects / Keyword chains:B Parasites / Symbol / Culture / Religion
Further subjects:B Collection of essays
Online Access: Volltext (Resolving-System)
Volltext (lizenzpflichtig)
Parallel Edition:Non-electronic
Available in another form: 9781433115479
Description
Summary:The fear of parasites – with their power to invade, infest, and transform the self – writhes and wriggles through cultures and religions across the globe, reflecting a very human revulsion of being invaded and consumed by both internal and external forces. However, in ancient China, the parasitic wasp and the worm illuminate the relationship between the sage and his pupil. On the Indian sub-continent, Hindu cultures worship Nagas, entities who protect sources of drinking water from parasitic contamination, and the reciprocal relationship between parasite and host is a recurring theme in Vedic literature and ayurvedic texts. In medieval Europe, worms are symbols of both corruption through sin and redemption through Christ. In traditional African American culture, disease is attributed to infestation by supernatural spiders, bugs, and worms, while in the rainforests of southern Argentina, parasitologists fight against very real parasitic invaders. The worm represents our Jungian shadow, and we fear their bodies for they are our own – soft and vulnerable, powerfully destructive, mindlessly living off the corpses of others, and feeding on the corpse of the world.This book gathers together scholarly research from diverse disciplines, including anthropology, the health sciences, history, literature, the medical humanities, parasitology, sociology, and religious studies
Contents: Misha Tadd: The Power of Parasites and Worms – Lesley Jo Weaver/Amber R. Campbell Hibbs: Serpents and Sanitation: A Biocultural Survey of Snake Worship, Cultural Adaptation, and Parasitic Disease in Ancient and Modern India – Levanya Vemsani: Worms and the Corporal Body in India: An Examination of Hindu Literary Traditions – Mark G. Pitner: The Wasp and the Worm: Getting Inside the Body of the Sage – Brenda S. Gardenour: A Snake in a Basin and a Worm in the Flesh: External Serpents, Internal Worms, and Authority over the Body in the Legenda Aurea of Jacob de Voragine – Alison More: Reading the Wormy Corpus: Ambiguity and Discernment in the Lives of Medieval Saints – Marta Crivos, et al.: Some Considerations Regarding the Origin and Functions of Parasites among Two Mbya Communities in Misiones, Argentina – Charlotte Baker: Parasites and the Postcolonial: Williams Sassine’s Saint Monsieur Baly – Amy M. Thomas: Worms Politic: Parasitism, Textual Decay and Conjure Truth in Gloria Naylor’s Mama Day – Yvonne Chireau: Invasion as Affliction: Worms and Bodily Infestation in African American Hoodoo Practices – Todd LeVasseur: We Are What We Don’t Eat: Worms, Bacteria, and the Soil Around Us – Julien R. Fielding: Inside/Out: The Body Under Attack in American Popular Culture
ISBN:1453902635
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.3726/978-1-4539-0263-9