Gossip and Secrecy: Women's Articulation of Domestic Conflict in Three Religions of Urban Brazil

1990; Volume: 51; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês

10.2307/3710812

ISSN

2325-7873

Autores

John Burdick,

Tópico(s)

Religion and Society Interactions

Resumo

In this paper I discuss how women in a Brazilian working-class town choose among the Catholic Church, pentecostalism, and Afro-Brazilian umbanda when seeking religious help in coping with domestic conflict. I argue that umbanda and pentecostalism, as cults of affliction in which blame for domestic conflict may be safely articulated and projected onto spiritual Others, limit the possibilities for gossip and increase those of secrecy. They are thus more attractive to women than is the Catholic Church, which places blame for domestic conflict on human agents and, as a local cult that recruits on the basis of prior social identity rather than affliction, makes women's efforts to speak about their domestic problems vulnerable to gossip.

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