Title: Religion
1Religion
This presentation discusses the role of religion
in a variety of societies. It focuses on the
types of religion and the situations in which
religions can change rapidly. It concludes with
a discussion of secular rituals and the way in
which a trip to Walt Disney World might be
studied as a secular ritual.
2Introduction
- Religion (Wallace)
- belief and ritual concerned with supernatural
beings, powers, and forces. - So defined, religion is a cultural universal.
- Neanderthal mortuary remains
- earliest evidence of what probably was religious
activity.
3Animism
- Animism is seen as the most primitive form of
religion - defined as a belief in souls that derives from
the first attempt to explain dreams and like
phenomena.
4Animatism
- Animatism is the belief that all animate and
inanimate objects are infused with a common life
force - the assignment to inanimate objects, forces, and
plants of personalities and wills, but not souls.
5Mana and Taboo
- Mana is defined as belief in an imminent
supernatural domain or life-force, potentially
subject to human manipulation. - Melanesian mana
- a sacred impersonal force that is much like the
Western concept of luck. - Examples in your own life?
- Polynesian mana and the related concept of taboo
- related to the more hierarchical nature of
Polynesian society.
6Magic and Religion
- Magic refers to supernatural techniques intended
to accomplish specific aims. - Magic may be imitative (as with voodoo dolls) or
contagious (accomplished through contact). - Have you tried this?
7Anxiety, Control, Solace
- Magic is an instrument of control,
- Religion serves to provide stability when no
control or understanding is possible.
8Rituals
- Rituals are formal, performed in sacred contexts.
- Rituals convey information about the culture of
the participants and, hence, the participants
themselves. - Rituals are inherently social
- participation in them necessarily implies social
commitment.
9Rites of Passage
- Rites of passage which mark and facilitate a
person's movement from one state to another - Rites of passage have three phases
- Separation the participant(s) withdraws from
the group and begins moving from one place to
another. - Liminality the period between states, during
which the participant(s) has left one place but
has not yet entered the next. - Incorporation the participant(s) reenters
society with a new status having completed the
rite.
10Rites of Passage
- Liminality is part of every rite of passage and
involves the temporary suspension and even
reversal of everyday social distinctions. - Communitas refers to collective liminality,
characterized by enhanced feelings of social
solidarity and minimized distinctions.
11Totemism
- Rituals play an important role in creating and
maintaining group solidarity. - In totemic societies, each descent group has an
animal, plant, or geographical feature from which
they claim descent. - Totems are the apical ancestor of clans.
- The members of a clan did not kill or eat their
totem, except once a year when the members of the
clan gathered for ceremonies dedicated to the
totem.
12Totemism
- Totemism is a religion in which elements of
nature act as sacred templates for society by
means of symbolic association. - Totemism uses nature as a model for society.
- Each descent group has a totem, which occupies a
specific niche in nature. - Social differences mirror the natural order of
the environment. - The unity of the human social order is enhanced
by symbolic association with and imitation of the
natural order.
13Totemism
14Religion and Cultural Ecology Sacred Cattle in
India
- Ahimsa is the Hindu doctrine of nonviolence that
forbids the killing of animals. - Western economic development experts often use
this principle as an example of how religion can
stand in the way of development. - Hindus seem to irrationally ignore a valuable
food source (beef). - Hindus also raise scraggly and thin cows, unlike
the bigger cattle of Europe and the U.S.
15Religion and Cultural Ecology Sacred Cattle in
India
- These views are ethnocentric and wrong as cattle
play an important adaptive role in an Indian
ecosystem that has evolved over thousands of
years - Hindus use cattle for transportation, traction,
and manure. - Bigger cattle eat more, making them more
expensive to keep. - Another example pig taboo in Middle East
16Social Control
- The power of religion affects action.
- Religion can be used to mobilize large segments
of society through systems of real and perceived
rewards and punishments. - Witch hunts play an important role in limiting
social deviancy in addition to functioning as
leveling mechanisms to reduce differences in
wealth and status between members of society.
17Social Control
- Many religions have a formal code of ethics that
prohibit certain behavior while promoting other
kinds of behavior. - Examples in your society?
- Religions also maintain social control by
stressing the fleeting nature of life.
18Religion and Social Control in Afghanistan
- The Taliban invoked a very strict interpretation
of the Koran as the basis for social behavior. - Women were required to wear veils, remain
indoors, and were not allowed to be with males
who are not blood relatives. - Men were required to grow bushy beards and were
barred from playing cards, flying kites, and
keeping pigeons.
19Kinds of Religion
- Religious forms vary from culture to culture, but
there are correlations between political
organization and religious type. - Religious Practitioners and Types
- Wallace defined religion as consisting of all a
societys cult institutions (rituals and
associated beliefs) and developed four categories
from this. - Shamanic religions
- shamans are part-time religious intermediaries
who may act as curers--these religions are most
characteristic of foragers.
20Kinds of Religion (continued)
- Communal religions
- have shamans, community rituals, multiple nature
gods, and are more characteristic of food
producers than foragers. - Olympian religions
- first appeared with states, have full-time
religious specialists whose organization may
mimic the states, and have potent anthropomorphic
gods who may exist as a pantheon. - Monotheistic religions
- have all the attributes of Olympian religions,
except that the pantheon of gods is subsumed
under a single eternal, omniscient, omnipotent,
and omnipresent being.
21Christian Values
- Max Weber linked the spread of capitalism to the
values central to the Protestant faith
independent, entrepreneurial, hard working,
future-oriented, and free thinking. - The emphasis Catholics placed on immediate
happiness and security, and the notion that
salvation was attainable only when a priest
mediated on ones behalf, did not fit well with
capitalism.
22World Religions
- In the U.S. Protestants outnumber Catholics, but
in Canada the reverse is true. - Religious affiliation in North America varies
with ethnic background, age, and geography.
23Revitalization Movements
- Religious movements that act as mediums for
social change are called revitalization
movements. - The colonial-era Iroquois reformation led by
Handsome Lake is an example of a revitalization
movement.
24Syncretisms
- A syncretism is a cultural mix, including
religious blends, that emerge when two or more
cultural traditions come into contact. - Examples include voodoo, santeria, and candomlé.
- The cargo cults of Melanesia and Papua New Guinea
are syncretisms of Christian doctrine with
aboriginal beliefs. - Syncretisms often emerge when traditional,
non-Western societies have regular contact with
industrialized societies. - Syncretisms attempt to explain European
domination and wealth and to achieve similar
success magically by mimicking European behavior
and symbols.
25A New Age
- Since the 1960s, there has been a decline in
formal organized religions. - New Age religions have appropriated ideas,
themes, symbols, and ways of life from the
religious practices of Native Americans,
Australian Aborigines, and east Asian religions.
26A Pilgrimage to Walt Disney World
- Walt Disney World functions much like a sacred
shrine that is a major pilgrimage destination - It has an inner, sacred center surrounded by an
outer more secular domain. - Parking lot designations are distinguished with
totemlike images of the Disney cast of
characters. - The monorail provides travelers with a brief
liminal period as they cross between the outer,
secular world into the inner, sacred center of
the Magic Kingdom. - Within the Magic Kingdom
- Spending time in the Magic Kingdom reaffirms,
maintains, and solidifies the world of Disney as
all of the pilgrims share a common status as
visitors while experiencing the same adventures. - Most of the structures and attractions at the
Magic Kingdom are designed to reaffirm and recall
a traditional set of American values.
27Recognizing Religion
- It is difficult to distinguish between sacred and
secular rituals as behavior can simultaneously
have sacred and secular aspects. - Americans try to maintain a strict division
between the sacred and the profane, but many
other societies do not. - The future?
- Wade Davis on the Ethnosphere