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Wrapping Transcendence: The Semiotics of Reliquaries

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 2025

Massimo Leone*
Affiliation:
Università di Torino
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Abstract

After pinpointing the semiotic mechanism of relics, this essay highlights the danger of their being turned into fetishes with reference to the Tractatus Garsiae, a hilarious medieval parody that wittily uncovers the semiotic proximity between the collection of fetishized relics and that of fetishized money. In subsequent sections I point out how reliquaries have been adopted as an antidote to the fetishizing of relics and explain how that works through a theoretical analysis of the human anthropology of wrapping. After indicating some possible directions for further analysis (in order to deepen the typological and comparative knowledge of reliquaries), I conclude the essay by focusing on a case study of a pragmatically felicitous instance of a reliquary: the semiotic “open work” of Francis Xavier’s seventeenth-century reliquary in Goa.

Information

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 2014 Semiosis Research Center at Hankuk University of Foreign Studies. All rights reserved.
Figure 0

Figure 1. Semiotic square

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Figure 2. Tensive diagram

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Figure 3. Plastic typology of wrapping

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Figure 4. Tridimensional tensive diagram

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Figure 5. Plaque in the Museum of Korea University, Seoul, pointing to the “Relics of the Donors.” Photograph by the author.

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Figure 6. Picture advertising for the “perfectly pristine” packaging of an iPhone on eBay

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Figure 7. The silver shrine of Saint Francis Xavier in Goa, courtesy of Fr. Kevin Monteiro, SJ

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Figure 8. Decorative engraving of the sarcophagus reliquary of Saint Francis Xavier in Goa, courtesy of Fr. Kevin Monteiro, SJ.