
SANTERÍA COPRESENCE AND THE MAKING OF AFRICAN DIASPORA BODIES
Author(s) -
BELISODE JESÚS AISHA
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
cultural anthropology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.669
H-Index - 75
eISSN - 1548-1360
pISSN - 0886-7356
DOI - 10.14506/ca29.3.04
Subject(s) - diaspora , racialization , sociology , mediation , anthropology , habitus , embodied cognition , yoruba , gender studies , aesthetics , ethnography , epistemology , race (biology) , philosophy , social science , linguistics
In Santería priesthoods, practitioners are “made” into African diaspora bodies in what is called “making santo.” These embodied epistemologies reveal not only the complex historical practices that have emerged through processes of racialization and enslavement but also how a body logic resituates the formations of diasporic feeling and sensing. I argue that practitioners’ everyday acts redefine the capacities of and for action as part of a spiritual habitus. The various rituals, works, and spiritual acts in Santería thus culminate in a different form of bodily engagement with the world, operating in racial space. This article examines Santería body logics, showing how what I call copresences are activated in somatic racial ontologies. I suggest that these diasporic sensings resituate anthropological universalisms, arguing for a disruption in the debate between mediation and practice in the anthropology of religion. Rather than assuming notions of presence, copresence allows for an intervention that hails Santería's embodied epistemology as a form of diasporic sensing.