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1986

6 x 9 in.
228 pp., illus.

ISBN: 978-0-292-75110-1
$25.00, paperback
Print-on-demand title; expedited shipping not available
33% website discount: $16.75

This book is a digital facsimile of the 1986 edition.

 
 
 
     

Mary, Michael, and Lucifer
Folk Catholicism in Central Mexico

By John M. Ingham

 

 

"In Mary, Michael, and Lucifer, there is a wonderful blending of the religious with other cultural domains.... The manuscript contains the best discussion of Mexican peasant ideas about biological conception that I know [and] outstanding analyses of folk medicine, male drinking patterns, and the moral qualities of the landscape in and around Tlayacapan."

—Stanley Brandes, professor of anthropology, University of California, Berkeley

The physical signs of Roman Catholicism pervade the Mexican countryside. Colonial churches and neighborhood chapels, wayside shrines, and mountaintop crosses dot the landscape. Catholicism also permeates the traditional cultures of rural communities, although this ideational influence is less immediately obvious. It is often couched in enigmatic idiom and imagery, and it is further obscured by the vestiges of pagan customs and the anticlerical attitudes of many villagers. These heterodox tendencies have even led some observers to conclude that Catholicism in rural Mexico is little more than a thin veneer on indigenous practice.

In Mary, Michael, and Lucifer John M. Ingham attempts to develop a modern semiotic and structuralist interpretation of traditional Mexican culture, an interpretation that accounts for the culture's apparent heterodoxy. Drawing on field research in Tlayacapan, Morelos, a village in the central highlands, he shows that nearly every domain of folk culture is informed with religious meaning. More precisely, the Catholic categories of spirit, nature, and evil compose the basic framework of the villagers' social relations and subjective experiences.

John M. Ingham is associate professor of anthropology at the University of Minnesota, Minneapolis.

Latin American Monographs, Number 69
Teresa Lozano Long Institute for Latin American Studies

 Of Related Interest Rugeley, Of Wonders and Wise Men

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