International Journal For Multidisciplinary Research
E-ISSN: 2582-2160
•
Impact Factor: 9.24
A Widely Indexed Open Access Peer Reviewed Multidisciplinary Bi-monthly Scholarly International Journal
Home
Research Paper
Submit Research Paper
Publication Guidelines
Publication Charges
Upload Documents
Track Status / Pay Fees / Download Publication Certi.
Editors & Reviewers
View All
Join as a Reviewer
Get Membership Certificate
Current Issue
Publication Archive
Conference
Publishing Conf. with IJFMR
Upcoming Conference(s) ↓
Conferences Published ↓
IC-AIRCM-T3-2026
SPHERE-2025
AIMAR-2025
SVGASCA-2025
ICCE-2025
Chinai-2023
PIPRDA-2023
ICMRS'23
Contact Us
Plagiarism is checked by the leading plagiarism checker
Call for Paper
Volume 8 Issue 2
March-April 2026
Indexing Partners
Embodied Devotion and Ritual Performance: A Visual Ethnography of Veerapandi Gowmariamman Temple Festival, Theni
| Author(s) | Mr. Panneer Selvam .G, Dr. Abdullah Alfazeena |
|---|---|
| Country | India |
| Abstract | This study examines the embodied dimensions of ritual practices in the Veerapandi Gowmariamman Temple festival, Theni district, Tamil Nadu, through a visual-ethnographic approach grounded in embodiment theory. Moving beyond symbolic and textual interpretations of religion, the research focuses on how devotion is enacted through the body in rituals such as piercing, fire walking, river immersion, karagam carrying, and temple procession. Drawing on Thomas Csordas’s concept of embodiment, the study interprets the body as the primary site of religious experience, where meaning is produced through sensory engagement, physical endurance, and disciplined movement. Using photographic documentation as primary data, the study analyzes gesture, posture, spatial interaction, and collective participation to understand how ritual practices are lived and experienced. The findings reveal that the body functions as a sacred medium through which devotion is expressed, with pain, endurance, and multisensory immersion playing central roles in shaping spiritual experience. The study also highlights the importance of collective embodiment, where shared bodily participation reinforces social cohesion and cultural identity. Additionally, the interaction between the body and natural elements such as fire and water underscores the material and environmental dimensions of ritual practice. By situating ritual within the framework of embodiment theory, this study contributes to contemporary cultural and anthropological scholarship by demonstrating that religion is fundamentally a lived, corporeal experience. It further establishes the value of visual ethnography in capturing the non-verbal and performative aspects of ritual that are often overlooked in conventional research. |
| Keywords | Embodiment Theory; Ritual Practices; Visual Ethnography; Devotion; Temple Festival; Veerapandi Gowmariamman; Tamil Nadu; Body and Religion; Sensory Experience; Collective Participation |
| Field | Sociology > Journalism / Media |
| Published In | Volume 8, Issue 2, March-April 2026 |
| Published On | 2026-03-23 |
| DOI | https://doi.org/10.36948/ijfmr.2026.v08i02.72138 |
Share this

E-ISSN 2582-2160
CrossRef DOI is assigned to each research paper published in our journal.
IJFMR DOI prefix is
10.36948/ijfmr
Downloads
All research papers published on this website are licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License, and all rights belong to their respective authors/researchers.
Powered by Sky Research Publication and Journals