Betwixt and Between Liminality and Marginality


Mind the Gap

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LEXINGTON BOOKS
By: Edited by Zohar Hadromi-Allouche, Michael Hubbard MacKay, Contributions by Patrick Brittenden, Pauline Brooks, Yu-Chun Chen, Michele Avis Feder-Nadoff, Zohar Hadromi-Allouche, Keren Abbou Hershkovits, Jamie Ingram, Jose R. Irizarry
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HARDBACK
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356

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Zohar Hadromi-Allouche is assistant professor in Classical Islamic Religious Thought and Dialogue in Trinity College Dublin. Michael Hubbard MacKay is associate professor of religion at Brigham Young University.

Introduction: Mind the Gap: Betwixt and between Liminality and Marginality Zohar Hadromi-Allouche and Michael Hubbard MacKay Section One: Liminality Without: Marginalized Communities Chapter One: Layers of Liminality and Marginality in the African Hebrew Israelite Community Michael T. Miller Chapter Two: Liberating Liminality in the Contemporary Church of Algeria Patrick Brittenden Chapter Three: "Neither here nor there": Border-crossing and liminal states in Rose Tremain's The Road Home Maria Antonietta Struzziero Section Two: Liminality Within: Group Interaction Within the Liminal Space Chapter Four: Liminal Space and Liminal Place: The Medieval Church Porch Jamie Ingram Chapter Five: Hammering in-between: Liminality and Contingency in Artisanal Practice, Santa Clara del Cobre, Michoacan, Mexico Michele Avis Feder-Nadoff Chapter Six: Liminality in Time: The Taipei Dance Circle as a Process Yu-Chun Chen Chapter Seven: Mormon Polygamy: Liminal or Normative? Michael Hubbard MacKay Section Three: Within and Without: Liminality and Dialogue Chapter Eight: Liminal Dialogue: Solomon Ibn Verga's Tale of Ephraim Ibn Sanjo and Kind Pedro I of Aragon Eric Ziolkowski Chapter Nine: Intermediality: Performing the Liminal in the Dance Work Falling Pauline Brooks Section Four: Liminality as an Agent of Change Chapter Ten: The Pedagogics of Liminality: Ivan Illich and the Critique of Institutional Ritualization Jose R. Irizarry Chapter Eleven: Agents of Conversion: Agency of Women in Early Islam Keren Abbou Hershkovits Chapter Twelve: Wife and leader: Khadijah as a first follower Zohar Hadromi-Allouche Conclusion Zohar Hadromi-Allouche and Michael Hubbard MacKay About the Contributors

Taking liminality as 'the gap between worlds' this fascinating edited collection brings new life to the concept. Building on the understanding of liminality first explored by Arnold van Gennep and later developed by Victor Turner, this book provides exciting insights into the practice and meaning of liminality in a variety of contexts. The thirteen chapters are based on solid, original multi- and interdisciplinary research in several different fields of enquiry ranging from religious communities, dance, arts and crafts to church porches. The book not only acknowledges the founding work of van Gennep and Turner, but through the fresh insights offered bring challenging questions to the fore that serve to develop the concept of liminality. In so doing, this book, a valuable resource for all scholars interested in the betwixt and between, shows the on-going value of thinking with and through the liminal. -- Hazel Andrews, Liverpool John Moores University Liminality and marginality are two of the most crucial concepts in the social sciences and humanities. But how do they relate to each other? How can we think of the liminal and marginal - together, apart or in juxtaposition? This volume opens up for those crucial questions via a series of fascinating case studies and conceptual discussions, cutting across space and time. Recommended! -- Bjorn Thomassen, Roskilde University

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