© Exzellenzcluster/Stefan Matlik/nur-design-text.de/nach Totenmaske Museum für Sepulkralkultur, Kassel, GS 1994/54

Body. Cult. Religion. Perspectives from antiquity to the present

Exhibition of the Cluster of Excellence “Religion and Politics” on the body in the religions of the world – at the Archaeological Museum and the Bible Museum of the University of Münster in 2024/2025

The body has always been part of the practices and ideas of religions across the world. This is shown in the exhibition “Body. Cult. Religion. Perspectives from antiquity to the present” organized by the Cluster of Excellence “Religion and Politics” at the University of Münster. The exhibition can be seen at the Archaeological Museum and the Bible Museum of the University of Münster from 25 October 2024 to 26 February 2025, and is part of the Cluster of Excellence’s interdisciplinary annual theme for 2024/25 on “Body and Religion”. Read more

  • Opening Hours

    University of Münster Archaeological Museum

    Domplatz 20–22, 48143 Münster

    Opening hours: Tue to Sun 10 am–6 pm | public holidays 10 am–6 pm | 2nd Fri of the month 10 am–midnight

    University of Münster Bible Museum

    Pferdegasse 1, 48143 Münster

    Opening hours: Tue to Sun 10 am–6 pm | 2nd Fri of the month 10 am–10 pm

  • Admission prices

    €6 / €3 reduced

    Groups of 10 or more: €4 per person

    Free admission: University of Münster students, as well as children and young people under 18

    Queries about guided tours: koerperausstellung@uni-muenster.de | Guided tours: €40

Photos

Entrance to the exhibition shortly before the opening
Entrance to the exhibition shortly before the opening
© exc
  • Opening ceremony in the Fürstenberghaus
    © exc/Paul Schneider
  • Welcome address by Michael Quante, Vice-Rector for International Affairs, Transfer and Sustainability at the University of Münster
    © exc/Paul Schneider
  • Welcome address by Klaus Rosenau, Mayor of the City of Münster
    © exc/Paul Schneider
  • Numerous guests in lecture theatre F2 at the University of Münster
    © exc/Paul Schneider
  • Welcome address by Michael Seewald, spokesperson for the Cluster of Excellence "Religion and Politics"
    © exc/Paul Schneider
  • Angelika Lohwasser, Egyptologist and curator of the exhibition, presents the annual theme 2024/2025 "Body and Religion" at the Cluster of Excellence
    © exc/Paul Schneider
  • The two curators, Holger Strutwolf, director of the Bible Museum, and Achim Lichtenberger, director of the Archaeological Museum, provide an initial overview of the exhibition ‘Body. Cult. Religion.’
    © exc/Paul Schneider
  • Michael Quante, Michael Seewald, Angelika Lohwasser, Holger Strutwolf, Klaus Rosenau, Achim Lichtenberger
    © exc/Paul Schneider
  • A look at the exhibition ‘Body. Cult. Religion.’
    © exc/Paul Schneider
  • The exhibition has opened!
    © exc/Paul Schneider
  • The first visitors are being guided through the exhibition
    © exc/Paul Schneider
  • Visitors can take part in a survey that invites them to take a closer look at the themes of the exhibition
    © exc/Paul Schneider
  • Visitor looking at exhibits in the ‘Gender roles?’ themed area
    © exc/Paul Schneider
  • A media station shows an animated film about a study on religious clothing
    © exc/Paul Schneider
  • Nkisi-Nkonde, a so-called nail fetish from the Congo from the 19th/20th century, in the topic ‘Religion and Healing’
    © exc/Paul Schneider
  • Portrait of a doctor in the thematic area of ‘Religion and Healing’
    © exc/Paul Schneider
  • Achim Lichtenberger, director of the Archaeological Museum, gives insights into the exhibition
    © exc/Paul Schneider
  • Statuette of Shiva as an ascetic
    © exc/Paul Schneider
  • Photo series ‘Orthodox Eros’ by Lea Golda Holtermann
    © exc/Paul Schneider
  • View of a Buddhist altar in the ‘Divine Figures’ section
    © exc/Paul Schneider
  • Three further topics are exhibited in the Bible Museum
    © exc/Paul Schneider

The exhibition’s seven themes

Archaeological Museum

© exc/nur design/Stefan Matlik

Divine Figures

Concepts of deities or superhuman beings and powers are often human-like, but not always. Concrete physical images make it easier to access and understand something higher and invisible. However, perceptions of the divine are diverse in every religion and sometimes differ considerably.

The "divine" encompasses not only the individual deities in the narrower sense, but also a multitude of invisible powers. Read more

 

 

 

© exc/nur design/Stefan Matlik

Gender Roles?

Male and female are central, but not absolute categories of physicality, which are also religiously legitimised and defined, from which role attributions – social, reproductive and sexual – arise.

In scholarship, a distinction is often made between the ‘biological’ gender on the one hand, i.e. the gender assigned to a person on the basis of physiological attributes, and social gender on the other hand, which refers to behavioural expectations that are associated with biological gender. Read more

 

 

© exc/nur design/Stefan Matlik

Religion and Healing

Diseases are considered part of the body’s transience. However, they are sometimes attributed to supernatural causes, negative energies, disharmonies, bad karma and the like.

Religious practices such as prayers, confessions of sins, sacrifices, incantations or other ritual acts are intended to counteract this, serve healing or help the sick person to bear his fate more easily. Read more

 

 

 

© exc/nur design/Stefan Matlik

After Death...

Death biologically represents the end of life, but the treatment of the dead body in many religions reflects ideas of an "afterlife".

In some traditions, an essential component of continued existence is the preservation of the body, which is why attempts are made to stop or slow down the natural process of decay by means of various practices such as mummification. Read more

Bible Museum

© exc/nur design/Stefan Matlik

Purity of the Body

Purity and impurity are important categories in many religions. Water and smoke in particular are used for religious purification rites that focus on the body.

Two major types of purity regulations can be distinguished: prophylactic and cathartic purity regulations. The first regulations are preventive and are intended to keep people away from impurities, while the second regulations show how impurities can be reversed. Read more

 

 

© exc/nur design/Stefan Matlik

Rituals of Life

People pass through various social stages in their lives. The transitions between these stages are often characterised
by religious beliefs and associated actions that are performed on the individual body.

In many societies, the transition between certain stages is accompanied by rituals of formal acceptance – known as "initiation" – into the new stage of life. Initiation processes or rituals exist worldwide in different societies and eras. Read more

 

 

© exc/nur design/Stefan Matlik

Disembodiment

Body and soul or spirit are understood as a unit, but can also be separated. The soul or spirit can leave the body, at the latest at death.

However, people can also disembody themselves during their lifetime through religious practices and attain a different consciousness. Every person experiences one form of disembodiment: dreaming. They therefore experience a difference between their physical existence and their phenomenal consciousness. Read more

Annual theme “Body and Religion” at the Cluster of Excellence

© exc/Stefan Matlik

In the world’s religions, the body is both an object and an expression of religious beliefs. The Cluster of Excellence is investigating this phenomenon in the 2024/2025 annual theme “Body and Religion”. Whether healing and purification rituals, asceticism and fasting, head coverings and tattoos, or practices performed on the dead body – religious ideas about people, gods, and the worlds beyond are reflected in how the human body has been treated across epochs and cultures. The lines of tradition range from ancient polytheistic religions to today’s interpretations of Judaism, Christianity and Islam. The annual theme presents the Cluster of Excellence’s current research on “Body and Religion” in an exhibition and an extensive programme of events that provides space for discussion between researchers and the general public. Read more

Programme of events accompanying the exhibition

© exc/Stefan Matlik

The Cluster of Excellence’s 2024/25 annual theme “Body and Religion” features an exhibition that is accompanied by a diverse programme of events that provide the general public with further insights into the diverse relationships between the body and how it has been conceived in religious ideas of the past and present. The programme includes panel discussions, lectures and films, guided tours of the exhibition with the curators, as well as the opportunity to “walk and talk”. The events provide a space for people to think about and discuss the themes of the exhibition, as well as to reflect on current issues relating to the body, health and spirituality, and religious clothing in public spaces. A dance workshop invites those interested to experience spirituality in various types of dance. The Cluster of Excellence’s anthropological documentary film “Drugs & Prayers” examines how people with mental illnesses are treated with medication and prayers at the Sufi shrine of Mira Datar in northern Gujarat, India.  Read more

Catalogue and volume of essays for the exhibition

Erhardt, S.; Graefe, J.; Lichtenberger, A.; Lohwasser, A.; Nieswandt, H.-H.; Strutwolf, H. (eds.): Body. Cult. Religion: Perspectives from antiquity to the present. Münster 2024.

Lichtenberger, A.; Lohwasser, A.; Strutwolf, H. (eds.): The Body in Religion: Images and practices. In the Ergon-Verlag series “Religion and Politics”. Baden-Baden. In print.

Conference “Body images and body practices in the religions of the world”

In preparation for the exhibition, the interdisciplinary conference “Body images and body practices in the religions of the world” took place at the Cluster of Excellence from 13 to 15 November. The Protestant theologian Prof. Dr. Christoph Markschies, president of the Berlin-Brandenburg Academy of Sciences and Humanities, and president of the Union of the German Academies of Sciences and Humanities, gave the keynote speech on “God and the body – some unusual perspectives from the Jewish-Christian tradition”.

Press release on the conference “Body images and body practices in the religions of the world”