Introduction: Clothing, Rite and Religion: Popular Religiosity as an element of cultural and socioeconomic reproduction
Keywords:
costume, folklore, religion, religiosityAbstract
Rite and folklore are an integral part of religious practice. Popular celebration, religion and clothing are fundamental pieces of "the way the people see themselves." In this argumentative line, beyond that image progressively blurred by the unifying effect of globalization, through folklore and popular attire, they constitute a whole framework of analysis to understand the values, customs and meanings of each culture. However, despite what one might believe, and perhaps as a reaction to this globalizing effect, it is surprising the permanence, revitalization and vindication that peoples and regions do during the last decades, of their own traditional elements, such as dance, traditional festivals, and above all, the costume. Despite being parallel to an intense secularization of daily life.
Downloads
Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License
The articles published at Journal of the Sociology and Theory of Religion will have a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC BY 4.0).
The journal allows the authors to retain publishing rights. Authors may reprint their articles in other media without having to request authorization, provided they indicate that the article was originally published in Journal of the Sociology and Theory of Religion.
