Excerpt from “Tarantism and Catholicism”

Ernesto de Martino · 2017

Ernesto de Martino (1908–65) could be described as one of the founding figures of Italian ethnology.

Type:
Book Chapter
Author:
Ernesto de Martino
Published:
2017
Publisher:
University of California Press

Ernesto de Martino (1908–65) could be described as one of the founding figures of Italian ethnology. Until his work was translated into English, he was fairly unknown to English-speaking anthropologists. Since then, however, the importance of his contributions to the field has received wider recognition. In the book <italic>Terra del Rimorso: Contributo a una storia religiosa del Sud</italic> (<italic>The Land of Remorse: A Study of Southern Italian Tarantism</italic>), de Martino unravels how alterity may be found “at home,” through a study in the southern peninsula of Salento of rural people seasonally affected by <italic>tarantismo</italic>, a form of possession attributed to the bite of the <italic>tarantola</italic> spider.<sup>1</sup> The affliction is cured by the performance of “choreutic” dances followed by pilgrimages and offerings made to Saint Paul. For de Martino, <italic>tarantismo</italic> is the living presence of an other-than-Catholic history—an echo of earlier pagan, erotic ritual forms. Tarantism can be understood only when placed within the context of Catholicism’s regional history, its broader social and economic conflicts, and tensions around gender, kinship, and sexuality within the home. The cult is one that the Catholic Church has “purged” but also resignified and appropriated in an effort to contain its vitality. As de Martino shows, however, the church’s engagement with the cult in the first half of the twentieth century colludes with scientific…

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What is "Excerpt from “Tarantism and Catholicism”" about?
Ernesto de Martino (1908–65) could be described as one of the founding figures of Italian ethnology.
Who wrote "Excerpt from “Tarantism and Catholicism”"?
Ernesto de Martino