Rites of passage mark important changes during human life and, for the neonate, its transition from intrauterine life into society. Their original intent was to purify the body from blood and meconium. But the cleansing rites had a spiritual dimension from the very start. When the rites of Mesopotamian, Egyptian, Jewish, Greek, Roman, Hindu, Nordic, Muslim, Maya, and Christian cultures are briefly compared, they reveal a remarkable similarity. What most rites had in common was the cleansing of the body, or sprinkling it with water; special clothing; the exorcism of evil spirits; blessings and prayers for good spirits; and a name-giving ceremony and a feast for family, relatives, and friends. Before this rite, the infant's social existence was incomplete and it could easily be abandoned or killed, as was usual in cases of severe malformations. Infant baptism originated in the 4th century CE with the concept of original sin. Emergency baptism originated in the 12th century and had a profound influence on the development of obstetrics and neonatal care. Rites of passage defined, but also set an end to, the liminal status between life and death in a phase of high mortality and partial personhood, and granted the right to live for the infant.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1159/000477955 | DOI Listing |
Soc Sci Med
January 2025
Department of Psychology, James Cook University, Townsville, Queensland, 4814, Australia; Telethon Kids Institute, Perth, Western Australia, 6009, Australia; School of Human Sciences (Exercise and Sports Science), University of Western Australia, Perth, 6009, Australia.
Objective: Although social factors and culture are significant determinants of health in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples, little is known academically about key interpersonal and social experiences of this population during the perinatal period, or how early attachments are formed through culture. This study addressed this gap in the literature.
Methods And Measures: A reflexive thematic analysis approach was applied to the data gathered from focus groups (N = 14) held with Aboriginal (N = 7) and Torres Strait Islander (N = 7) mothers and their kinship systems.
J Anal Psychol
November 2024
Frankfurt am Main, Germany.
The symbolic nature of taboo is examined as a container that differentiates developmental stages between the social values order/disorder through a ritual, liminal process of separating order as clean/blessed/safety and disorder as polluted/disassociated/risky. Unconscious/conscious taboos embody that perilous journey across margins in rites of passage and their emotional value and intensity in the form of symptomology varies cross-culturally. Two clinical cases are presented to illustrate the influence of taboo on obsessive compulsions and anorexia nervosa.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Nurs Stud
December 2024
The University of Haifa, The Women's and Gender Studies Program, Haifa, Israel.
Soc Sci Med
October 2024
University of Nairobi, Kenya. Electronic address:
Am J Orthopsychiatry
September 2024
Department of Social Work, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev.
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