
Making Places Sacred (Cambridge University Press)
Yujie Zhu (Centre for Heritage and Museum Studies) and Matt Tomlinson (School of Culture, History and Language, CAP) have published a new short book with Cambridge University Press titled Making Places Sacred. The book explores the dynamics of sacred place-making across different cultural and religious contexts.
Although claims to sacredness are often linked to the power of a distant past, the work of making places sacred is creative, novel, renewable, and reversible. This book highlights how sacred space is newly made. It is often associated with blood, death, and geographic anomalies, yet no single feature determines sacred associations. People make space sacred by connecting with 'extrahuman' figures – the ancestors, spirits, and gods that people attempt to interact with in every society. These connections can be concentrated in people's bodies, yet bodies are particularly vulnerable to loss. The book also examines the multidimensional and multisensory dimensions of sacred space, which can be made almost anywhere, including online, but can also be unmade. Unmaking sacred space can entail new sacralization. New and minority religions in particular provide excellent sites for studying sacredness as a value, raising the reliably productive question: sacred for whom?
The book is available for download here: https://www.cambridge.org/core/elements/making-places-sacred/72D06C95979528CCAFF7A13C03613F4A