Spirit Dolls (Muñequitas) in New York Puerto Rican Homes:

Engaging with Saints and Ancestors

Eileen M. Condon

Citation

Condon, Eileen M. “Spirit Dolls (Muñequitas) in New York Puerto Rican Homes: Engaging with Saints and Ancestors.” New York Folklore, vol. 39:1-2, 2013. pp. 14-22.

Summary

Forms, functions, and meanings of altars in Puerto Rican homes on the island or the US mainland are already well documented in association with Espiritismo and Santería, two forms of Caribbean religious belief and practice. Ethnographic descriptions of the roles that dolls play within these contexts of belief are less common. In the New York Puerto Rican homes in which I was welcomed between 2004 and 2007, as a participant observer in Puerto Rican Espiritismo, altars decorated with flowers, food, water offerings, and statues of the saints co-existed with mesitas and other doll displays. Mesitas are little tables, set with offerings for the dolls who sit beside them.

About The Article

Subjects
Regions
Populations