Description

Book Synopsis
In his richly illustrated Religion and Architecture in Premodern Indonesia Gaudenz Domenig investigates the nature of Indonesian ethnic religions by focusing on land opening rituals, sacred groves, and architectural responses to the custom of presenting offerings. Since deities and spirits were supposed to taste offerings on the spot, it was a task of architecture to attract them and to guide them into houses where offerings were presented. Domenig quotes numerous sources to show that certain material elements of the house were viewed as spirit attractors, spirit ladders or spirit pathways. Various ‘exotic’ features of Indonesian vernacular architecture thus become understandable as relics from times when architecture was still responding to indigenous religions practised in the archipelago.

Trade Review
"[...] this monograph is remarkable both for its thoroughness and the distinctive perspective its author brings to the topic." – Webb Keane, in Asian Ethnology 75.2 (2016), p. 489-493. "[...] this study is an invaluable contribution to the history of architecture, especially concerning the communities of Western and Eastern Indonesia, and by extension, other parts of Southeast Asia with related cultural linkages." – Hélène Njoto, in Bijdragen tot de Taal-, Land- en Volkenkunde 172 (2016), p. 384-386. "The idea that vernacular architectures lend concrete form to the worldviews of their creators is certainly not a new one, but it has never been explored in such depth or with such a degree of sophistication as we find in these pages. The originality of Domenig’s discussion marks a real breakthrough in the understanding of indigenous architectures of the archipelago, and his book will go on providing food for thought for both architects and ethnographers for a long time to come." – Roxana Waterson "This is a splendid book in spatial anthropology." – Wolfgang Marschall, in Anthropos 110 (2015).

Religion and Architecture in Premodern Indonesia: Studies in Spatial Anthropology

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    A Hardback by G. Domenig

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      View other formats and editions of Religion and Architecture in Premodern Indonesia: Studies in Spatial Anthropology by G. Domenig

      Publisher: Brill
      Publication Date: 03/04/2014
      ISBN13: 9789004274006, 978-9004274006
      ISBN10:

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      In his richly illustrated Religion and Architecture in Premodern Indonesia Gaudenz Domenig investigates the nature of Indonesian ethnic religions by focusing on land opening rituals, sacred groves, and architectural responses to the custom of presenting offerings. Since deities and spirits were supposed to taste offerings on the spot, it was a task of architecture to attract them and to guide them into houses where offerings were presented. Domenig quotes numerous sources to show that certain material elements of the house were viewed as spirit attractors, spirit ladders or spirit pathways. Various ‘exotic’ features of Indonesian vernacular architecture thus become understandable as relics from times when architecture was still responding to indigenous religions practised in the archipelago.

      Trade Review
      "[...] this monograph is remarkable both for its thoroughness and the distinctive perspective its author brings to the topic." – Webb Keane, in Asian Ethnology 75.2 (2016), p. 489-493. "[...] this study is an invaluable contribution to the history of architecture, especially concerning the communities of Western and Eastern Indonesia, and by extension, other parts of Southeast Asia with related cultural linkages." – Hélène Njoto, in Bijdragen tot de Taal-, Land- en Volkenkunde 172 (2016), p. 384-386. "The idea that vernacular architectures lend concrete form to the worldviews of their creators is certainly not a new one, but it has never been explored in such depth or with such a degree of sophistication as we find in these pages. The originality of Domenig’s discussion marks a real breakthrough in the understanding of indigenous architectures of the archipelago, and his book will go on providing food for thought for both architects and ethnographers for a long time to come." – Roxana Waterson "This is a splendid book in spatial anthropology." – Wolfgang Marschall, in Anthropos 110 (2015).

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