In the Christian tradition, representing the divine has often been considered both an impossible and yet necessary endeavour rooted in the human need in certain moments of weakness to visualize God. In this article, based on research findings from fieldwork carried out with urban indigenous groups in La Paz, Bolivia, I suggest that the articulation of local and Catholic representational traditions and practices has produced an understanding of the religious image not so much as an object of detached contemplation or a reference to a religious symbol but rather as an energized element which physically shapes the relationship and exchange between the material and the spiritual world. I suggest that through a study of Andean religious images we may be able to produce an alternative ontological perspective on the relationship between the spiritual, material, and living worlds. © Royal Anthropological Institute 2012.
CITATION STYLE
Tassi, N. (2012). “Dancing the image”: Materiality and spirituality in Andean religious “images.” Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, 18(2), 285–310. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-9655.2012.01744.x
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