Desecrating the Sacred: Linguistic Appropriation of Nagô Expressions and the Articulation of Religious Repression in Salvador, Brazil

Comprehensively understanding religious repression requires a critical examination of discursive-linguistic practices, given that language is a semiotic resource for ritual practice and negotiations of religious identity. Language has also been weaponized within colonial domination and religious sub...

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1. VerfasserIn: Washington, Adrienne Ronee (VerfasserIn)
Medienart: Elektronisch Aufsatz
Sprache:Englisch
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Veröffentlicht: The Pennsylvania State University Press 2021
In: Journal of Africana religions
Jahr: 2021, Band: 9, Heft: 2, Seiten: 165-202
normierte Schlagwort(-folgen):B Salvador / Yoruba-Sprache / Begriff / Kulturelle Aneignung / Religion / Unterdrückung
RelBib Classification:AD Religionssoziologie; Religionspolitik
AX Interreligiöse Beziehungen
BB Indigene Religionen
CH Christentum und Gesellschaft
KBN Subsahara-Afrika
KBR Lateinamerika
NCC Sozialethik
weitere Schlagwörter:B Sociolinguistics
B Indexicality
B Yoruba
B misappropriation
B religious subordination
B Semiotics
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Zusammenfassung:Comprehensively understanding religious repression requires a critical examination of discursive-linguistic practices, given that language is a semiotic resource for ritual practice and negotiations of religious identity. Language has also been weaponized within colonial domination and religious subjugation because of how religious and linguistic practices intersect. This article explores linguistic appropriation as part of the symbolic and material(ized) violence that represses African-matrix religions. Focusing on Salvador, Brazil, I analyze cases of linguistic-spiritual appropriation wherein commercial industries and evangelical Christians adopt Nagô/Yoruba expressions derived from African-matrix liturgical registers and reshape them to the detriment of their source communities. This investigation highlights how kindred ideological processes, like evangelicalism and the national projects of mestiçagem and democracia racial, become entextualized and reconstituted through discursive processes. It demonstrates the paradox of socially and politically dominant groups co-opting, commodifying, and capitalizing on the very ritual practices and institutions that they restrict, malign, and criminalize.
ISSN:2165-5413
Enthält:Enthalten in: Journal of Africana religions