"A nuanced and brilliant ethnography, this is a major contribution to scholarship." --
Foreign Affairs"A nuanced, multidimensional and sensitive analysis of race and popular culture in Brazil." --
Robert Stam, author of Tropical Multiculturalism: A Comparative History of Race in Brazilian Culture and Cinema...a rich study... a challenging and insightful book, worth the attention not only of Latin Americanists but of scholars of race and religion in the United States and elsewhere.
Religious Studies Review Volume 26, Number 4, October 2000.
A nuanced and brilliant ethnography, this is a major contribution to scholarship. --
Foreign AffairsThe puzzle of the Brazilian style of race relations has intrigued generations of scholars, but Burdick charts out new territory by examining racism in the context of Afro-Brazilian activism, popular religion, and the cultural politics of gender and desire. Avoiding simple formulas and always attentive to complexity, Burdick has produced both a nuanced ethnography and a contribution to theories of social movements and activist scholarship. -- David J. Hess, professor of anthropology, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, and author of
Samba in the Night: Spiritism in BrazilBlessed Anastacia is a brilliant, passionate study of the realities of race and injustice in Brazil...and represents the very best in new thinking from anthropology and cultural studies about Latin America. -- Orin Starn, author of
Nightwatch: The Making of a Movement in the Peruvian AndesA nuanced, multidimensional and sensitive analysis of race and popular culture in Brazil. -- Robert Stam, author of
Tropical Multiculturalism: A Comparative History of Race in Brazilian Culture and CinemaIt is unusual and refreshing for a scholar to acknowledge openly a motivation for a publication beyond that of pure research. Burdick's beautifully-written ethnography is strengthened by his candor.
Burdick focuses on the ways in which women of color in Brazil experience three separate forms of Christianity: the inculturated Catholic mass, Pentecostalism, and the cult of Anastacia, a Brazilian symbol of black female slavery...
Blessed Anastaciais a model for research into why and how individuals are attracted to particular religious forms and expressions. -- -Hannah W. Stewart-Gambino
Latin American Research ReviewIn
Blessed Anastacia Burdick contributes to a growing literature on the analysis of race in Latin America debunking the myth of racial democracy that teaches those who want to believe it exists to interpret inequality mainly in class, not color, terms...This book is a must read for its rich ethnographical, historical, and analytical challenges. It is a book that is truly interdisciplinary and a breath of fresh air for those of us who look to make our research meaningful to a broad audience. -- -Milagros Pena
University of FloridaBlessed Anastacia destroys stereotypes. Analyzing how women of color contend with issues of self-identity and pride via the prism of beauty, love, marriage, family and work within three religious contexts, the author concludes that Christianity can be a useful mechanism for expressing black identity, as well as for confronting racism..His [Burdick's] view of social movements is one in which contradictions, unexpected outcomes and contrariness are accepted as a natural outcome of the complexity of human choices. This is the strength of this work, in which his informants' views dominate rather than the author's. -- Luso-Brazilian Review, 38/1
In
Blessed Anastacia Burdick contributes to a growing literature on the analysis of race in Latin America debunking the myth of racial democracy that teaches those who want to believe it exists to interpret inequality mainly in class, not color, terms...This book is a must read for its rich ethnographical, historical, and analytical challenges. It is a book that is truly interdisciplinary and a breath of fresh air for those of us who look to make our research meaningful to a broad audience. -- -Milagros Pena
University of Florida...a rich study... a challenging and insightful book, worth the attention not only of Latin Americanists but of scholars of race and religion in the United States and elsewhere.
Religious Studies Review Volume 26, Number 4, October 2000.
A nuanced and brilliant ethnography, this is a major contribution to scholarship. --
Foreign AffairsThe puzzle of the Brazilian style of race relations has intrigued generations of scholars, but Burdick charts out new territory by examining racism in the context of Afro-Brazilian activism, popular religion, and the cultural politics of gender and desire. Avoiding simple formulas and always attentive to complexity, Burdick has produced both a nuanced ethnography and a contribution to theories of social movements and activist scholarship. -- David J. Hess, professor of anthropology, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, and author of
Samba in the Night: Spiritism in BrazilBlessed Anastacia is a brilliant, passionate study of the realities of race and injustice in Brazil...and represents the very best in new thinking from anthropology and cultural studies about Latin America. -- Orin Starn, author of
Nightwatch: The Making of a Movement in the Peruvian AndesA nuanced, multidimensional and sensitive analysis of race and popular culture in Brazil. -- Robert Stam, author of
Tropical Multiculturalism: A Comparative History of Race in Brazilian Culture and CinemaIt is unusual and refreshing for a scholar to acknowledge openly a motivation for a publication beyond that of pure research. Burdicks beautifully-written ethnography is strengthened by his candor.
Burdick focuses on the ways in which women of color in Brazil experience three separate forms of Christianity: the inculturated Catholic mass, Pentecostalism, and the cult of Anastacia, a Brazilian symbol of black female slavery...
Blessed Anastaciais a model for research into why and how individuals are attracted to particular religious forms and expressions. -- -Hannah W. Stewart-Gambino
Latin American Research ReviewIn
Blessed Anastacia Burdick contributes to a growing literature on the analysis of race in Latin America debunking the myth of racial democracy that teaches those who want to believe it exists to interpret inequality mainly in class, not color, terms...This book is a must read for its rich ethnographical, historical, and analytical challenges. It is a book that is truly interdisciplinary and a breath of fresh air for those of us who look to make our research meaningful to a broad audience. -- -Milagros Pena
University of FloridaBlessed Anastacia destroys stereotypes. Analyzing how women of color contend with issues of self-identity and pride via the prism of beauty, love, marriage, family and work within three religious contexts, the author concludes that Christianity can be a useful mechanism for expressing black identity, as well as for confronting racism..His [Burdicks] view of social movements is one in which contradictions, unexpected outcomes and contrariness are accepted as a natural outcome of the complexity of human choices. This is the strength of this work, in which his informants views dominate rather than the authors. -- Luso-Brazilian Review, 38/1
In
Blessed Anastacia Burdick contributes to a growing literature on the analysis of race in Latin America debunking the myth of racial democracy that teaches those who want to believe it exists to interpret inequality mainly in class, not color, terms...This book is a must read for its rich ethnographical, historical, and analytical challenges. It is a book that is truly interdisciplinary and a breath of fresh air for those of us who look to make our research meaningful to a broad audience. -- -Milagros Pena
University of Florida