EN PT


1481/2012 - Axe, bodily practices, and Aids in Africanist religions in Recife, Brazil
Axé, práticas corporais e Aids nas religiões africanistas do Recife

Author:

• Luis Felipe Rios - Rios, L. F. - Recife, PE - Universidade Federal de Penrambuco - <lfelipe.rios@gmail.com, luis.rnascimento@ufpe.br>
ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0767-7845

Co-author(s):

• Richard Parker - Parker, R. - Columbia University - <richardparker@gmail.com>
ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3796-0198
• Jonathan Garcia - Garcia, J. - Yale University - <jonathangar@gmail.com >
• Cinthia Oliveira - Oliveira, C. - Universidade Federal de Pernambuco - <cinthia_psi@hotmail.com >

Thematic Area:

Ciências Sociais

Abstract:

This article analyzes the responses of Afro-Brazilian religions to the Aids epidemic in Recife, considering the religious symbolic structure. Drawing on participant observation and in-depth interviews conducted with Afro-Brazilian religious leaders and public health officials, it highlights the importance of “axe”, the native category used to interpret corporal events and to understand the history of Aids in this religious community. Axe is the mystical energy in these religions: the corporal vitality. It is manipulated in religious rituals and is symbolically associated with blood, sweat and semen. In the times of HIV, these practices became means for the transmission of the virus through scarification rituals and exchanges in fluids during sexual transactions, which incidentally were key forms to care for axe and ways through which axe circulates among initiates. These elements were the focus in the dialogue among religious institutions and the public health system. This process generated changes in regulatory religious practices and the social reproduction of sexual life among religious initiates.

Keywords:

Afro-Brasilian religions HIV/Aids Sexuality Body

Content:

Access Issue in Scielo

Other languages:







How to

Cite

Rios, L. F., Parker, R., Garcia, J., Oliveira, C.. Axe, bodily practices, and Aids in Africanist religions in Recife, Brazil. Cien Saude Colet [periódico na internet] (2012/Aug). [Citado em 22/01/2025]. Está disponível em: http://cienciaesaudecoletiva.com.br/en/articles/axe-bodily-practices-and-aids-in-africanist-religions-in-recife-brazil/11049?id=11049&id=11049



Execution



Sponsors