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Where Saints Show Respect

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This book draws on three decades of ethnographic research to explore the penetration of mafia values in Sicilian society. By exploring rituals through which local society learns deep respect for ...
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  • 01 February 2026
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Where Saints Show Respect reveals the penetration of mafia values in Sicilian society. Instead of focusing on sensational criminality, this study considers rituals through which local society learns deep respect – sometimes fearful, but often playful or pious – for those values and their enforcers. State and Church misconstrue these values as vestiges of a society morally damned and left behind in a pagan past. This study draws on three decades of ethnographic research to explore a strikingly different Sicily from the self-congratulatory version of government and religious leaders, where a seemingly obscure set of rural practices offers a critical perspective on modernity itself.

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Price: $135.00
Pages: 280
Publisher: Berghahn Books
Imprint: Berghahn Books
Series: New Anthropologies of Europe: Perspectives and Provocations
Publication Date: 01 February 2026
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9781836953364
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: SOCIAL SCIENCE/Sociology/Marriage & Family, SOCIAL SCIENCE/Anthropology/Cultural & Social
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“This is a book by a scholar enormously well-read in anthropological thought, capable of achieving a critical distance from normative readings that other disciplines have afforded the mafia by adopting an ethnographic approach to the utmost. Thanks to this Palumbian anthropology, we come to a profound understanding of the specific influences of the mafia on religion.” • Giovanni Pizza, ANUAC 9 (2) (2020): 183-185.

Berardino Palumbo is Professor of Anthropology at the University of Messina. In addition to co-editing two series of anthropological monographs, he is the author of several books and articles on the anthropology of Italy, and Sicily in particular.

Acknowledgements

Foreword
Michael Herzfeld

Chapter 1. Thirty Years Later
Chapter 2. Bowing to Power
Chapter 3. Fireworks
Chapter 4. Biopolitics the Sicilian Way

Conclusion

Afterword
Jane Schneider and Peter Schneider

References
Index