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The Mind Possessed: The Cognition of Spirit Possession in an Afro-Brazilian Religious Tradition



The Mind Possessed: The Cognition of Spirit Possession in an Afro-Brazilian Religious Tradition
The Mind Possessed is a book about the cognitive science of religion and how spirit possession practices are related to different psychological systems. It is written by Emma Cohen and it is about how spirit possession practices are related to different psychological systems. Cohen uses ethnographic data to show how spirit possession practices are related to attention-grabbing activities. She argu... more details
Key Features:
  • The book is about how spirit possession practices are related to different psychological systems
  • Cohen uses ethnographic data to show how spirit possession practices are related to attention-grabbing activities
  • She argues that a cognitive approach offers more precise and testable hypotheses concerning the spread and appeal of spirit concepts and possession activities.


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Features
Author Emma Cohen
Format Hardcover
ISBN 9780195323351
Publisher Oxford University Press, Usa
Manufacturer Oxford University Press, Usa
Description
The Mind Possessed is a book about the cognitive science of religion and how spirit possession practices are related to different psychological systems. It is written by Emma Cohen and it is about how spirit possession practices are related to different psychological systems. Cohen uses ethnographic data to show how spirit possession practices are related to attention-grabbing activities. She argues that a cognitive approach offers more precise and testable hypotheses concerning the spread and appeal of spirit concepts and possession activities.

The cognitive science of religion has made a persuasive case for the view that a number of different psychological systems are involved in the construction and transmission of notions of extranatural agency such as deities and spirits. Until now this work has been based largely on findings in experimental psychology, illustrated mainly with hypothetical or anecdotal examples. In The Mind Possessed, Emma Cohen considers how the psychological systems undergirding spirit concepts are activated in real-world settings. Spirit possession practices have long had a magnetizing effect on academic researchers but there have been few, if any, satisfactory theoretical treatments of spirit possession that attempt to account for its emergence and spread globally. Drawing on ethnographic data collected during eighteen months of fieldwork in Belm, northern Brazil, Cohen combines fine-grained descriptions and analyses of mediumistic activities in an Afro-Brazilian cult house with a scientifically-grounded explanation for the emergence and spread of ideas about spirits, possession and healing. Cohen shows why spirit possession and its associated activities are inherently attention-grabbing. Making a radical departure from traditional anthropological, medicalist and sociological analyses, she argues that a cognitive approach offers more precise and testable hypotheses concerning the spread and appeal of spirit concepts and possession activities. This timely book presents new lines of enquiry for the cognitive science of religion (a rapidly growing field of interdisciplinary scholarship) and challenges the theoretical frameworks within which spirit possession practices have traditionally been understood.
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