Person and God in a Spanish Valley

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Princeton University Press, Mar 21, 1989 - Religion - 235 pages

A classic twentieth-century work in the anthropology of Catholicism

Person and God in a Spanish Valley is a moving portrait of how individuals and communities in a remote, mountainous valley of northern Spain relate to the divine. In the late 1960s, anthropologist and historian William A. Christian, Jr., conducted groundbreaking fieldwork in the Nansa Valley, one of the most devout regions of Spain. With sensitivity and uncommon insight, Christian describes the complex system of shrines, devotions, and pilgrimages that existed in the region for centuries, and recounts the disruption of the valley’s traditional way of life as young priests from urban centers arrived carrying a more modern, Vatican II version of Catholicism. Person and God in a Spanish Valley places Catholic faith and practice within a broader history of agrarian politics and reform in northern Spain, and stands as a landmark work of modern anthropology.

 

Contents

IV
1
V
11
VI
13
VII
15
VIII
18
IX
28
X
29
XI
36
XIX
88
XX
93
XXI
99
XXII
114
XXIII
180
XXIV
188
XXV
192
XXVI
195

XII
44
XIII
48
XIV
50
XV
54
XVI
61
XVII
78
XVIII
80
XXVII
198
XXVIII
202
XXIX
210
XXX
215
XXXI
219
XXXII
225
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About the author (1989)

William A. Christian, Jr., is a religious historian and independent scholar. His books include Moving Crucifixes in Modern Spain, Local Religion in Sixteenth-Century Spain, and Apparitions in Late Medieval and Renaissance Spain (all Princeton).

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