ABSTRACT

“The first time I witnessed a Spiritist surgery, a young man named Jose Carlos Ribeiro inserted a used scalpel taken from a tray that I was holding, and plunged it into the eye of an elderly man. The patient did not move….” Decades of fieldwork later, Sidney Greenfield presents a riveting ethnography of the complex world of religious healing in Brazil that challenges readers to grapple with the most fundamental concepts of anthropology and cross-cultural experience. In a major contribution to cultural biology, he analyses the complex social, economic, and political landscape of Brazil to understand dramatic healing practices that seem to defy medical explanation. This engrossing and provocative book will put students and scholars alike on the edge of their seats.

chapter |1 pages

Prologue

chapter |12 pages

An Invitation and Introduction

part I|72 pages

Surgeries And Other Healing in Kardecist-Spiritism

chapter 1|12 pages

José Carlos Ribeiro

An Introduction to Spiritist Therapy

chapter 2|14 pages

Edson Queiroz

Spiritist Surgeries in Recife

chapter 3|8 pages

Antonio de Oliveira Rios in Palmelo

chapter 4|8 pages

Mauricio Magalhães in Campo Grande

chapter 5|8 pages

Not All Patients Are Cured

Kardecism's Approach to Death and Dying

chapter 6|16 pages

The Disobsession

Another Form of Spiritist Therapy

part II|60 pages

Healing by the Spirits in Other Brazilian Popular Religions

part III|50 pages

Spirits, Healing, and a New Paradigm