Gender Equality in Death?: The Normative Dimension of Roman Catholic Ossuaries

Gender seems to be so important for social orientation that it does not end with death, but forms practices and ideas around death. In Roman Catholic regions across Europe we find charnel houses and ossuaries, where the bones of the deceased have been collected. The exposed mortal remains reminded t...

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Détails bibliographiques
Publié dans:Religion & gender
Auteur principal: Höpflinger, Anna-Katharina 1976- (Auteur)
Type de support: Électronique Article
Langue:Anglais
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Publié: Brill [2015]
Dans: Religion & gender
Sujets / Chaînes de mots-clés standardisés:B Mitteleuropa / Ossuaire / Mort / Représentation / Rôle de genre / Catholicisme
RelBib Classification:CB Spiritualité chrétienne
CE Art chrétien
CH Christianisme et société
KBA Europe de l'Ouest
KDB Église catholique romaine
NBE Anthropologie
NBK Sotériologie
Sujets non-standardisés:B Material Religion
B Ossuaries
B european history of religion
B Christianity
B Death and gender
B Normativity
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Résumé:Gender seems to be so important for social orientation that it does not end with death, but forms practices and ideas around death. In Roman Catholic regions across Europe we find charnel houses and ossuaries, where the bones of the deceased have been collected. The exposed mortal remains reminded the living of death and warned them to live a ‘good’ life. To explain the interrelation between such normative demands and the material representation of death, a gender-based perspective is useful: in their material representations, ossuaries offer gendered ideas of death. For example we find murals of masculine and feminine personifications of death as the Reaper. But ossuaries also posit the ungendered equality of all humans in death: girls, boys, women and men are nothing more than bones, arranged side by side. I argue that ossuaries can be understood as in-between spaces for gender concepts: they support a gendered social order, but they also blur gender differences.
ISSN:1878-5417
Contient:Enthalten in: Religion & gender
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.18352/rg.10080