Terms for Anthropology of Religion
Syncretism
Religion "(1) a system of symbols which acts to (2)
establish powerful, pervasive, and long-lasting moods and motivations in men by
(3) formulating conceptions of a general order of existence and (4) clothing these
conceptions with such an aura of factuality that (5) the moods and motivations
seem uniquely realistic" (Geertz 1966)
Magic vs. religion
Soul as social
Ritual
Shamanism
Monotheism
Polytheism
Animism
Totemism
Fetishism
Categories of Religion
- Individualistic: most basic; simplest. Example: vision quest.
- Shamanistic: part-time religious practitioner, uses religion to heal, to divine, usually on the behalf of a client. The Tillamook have four categories of shaman. Examples of shamans: spiritualists, faith healers, palm readers. Religious authority acquired through one's own means.
- Communal: elaborate set of beliefs and practices; group of people arranged in clans by lineage, age group, or some religious societies; people take on roles based on knowledge, and ancestral worship.
- Ecclesiastical: dominant in agricultural societies and states; are centrally organized and hierarchical in structure, paralleling the organization of states. Typically deprecates competing individualistic and shamanistic cults.
Elisa Sobo, “The Sweetness of Fat.”
·
Notions of health and nutrition and culturally
determined.
·
Marcel Mauss: Gift giving and exchange. A
threefold obligation to give, receive and reciprocate.
·
Food is an extension of shared substance,
creates/maintains bonds among family.
·
Food Sharing-Integral to social relations
·
Social constructions of fatness and thinness
·
Cooking as characteristic of personality.
Mintz and Du Bois,
“The Anthropology of Food and Eating.”
Approaches to
the Anthropology of Food:
·
Food as commodity
o
This approach looks at single commodities, such
as sugar, coffee, bananas, chocolate, etc., to examine wider social processes.
·
Food as agent of social change.
o
Examines relationships between larger social
processes (such as government, war, economy, colonization) and dietary shifts.
·
Food insecurity (shortage)
o
Examines world hunger, starvation, rural class
inequalities, gender inequalities, etc. Scholars in this field look at how
social/economic inequalities influence starvation.
·
Eating and ritual
o
Examines how food binds people to their faiths,
how ritual meals reaffirm faith. Looks at the reasons for food taboos, how
eating is a vehicle for ritual.
·
Eating and identities
o
Looks at how foods mark people
ethnically/religiously; how race, class, gender, and other markers of identity
are reinforced through food. For example, “ethnic food” is a product of
immigration: it is only ethnic out of context.
·
Eating and memory
o
Examines how memory and linkages to culture are
established through food.
Margaret Mead
·
Mead’s Central Question: “Are the disturbances
which vex our adolescents due to the nature of adolescence itself or to the
civilization? Under different conditions does adolescence present a different picture?”
(page 6)
·
Cultural Particularism
·
Nature vs. Nurture
·
Sexual Repression
·
Teenage Angst
·
Tabula rasa
·
Monocultural
·
Pluralistic
Morgan: Cultural Evolution
i.
Savagery
a.
Fishing, Stone tools, subsistence,
use of fire, pottery, basic weapons
ii.
Barbarism
a.
Use of writing, pastoralism,
horticulture, dwellings, metal work
iii.
Civilization
a.
Formalized written language and
record keeping, rise of private property, inheritance, development of the
state, organized religion
b.
Suppression of women/male dominance
The Functions of the family:
· Socialization
· Support
network
· Ensures
Survival
· Organizes
Sexuality
· Shares
resources
·
Types of families:
· Nuclear
family
· Extended
family
· Blended
family
· Chosen
family
Kinship terms:
· Shared
Substance
Consanguine
Consanguine
· Affinal
Ties
· Kinship
· Descendents
· Matrilineal,
Matriarchal, Matrilocal, Matrifocal
· Patrilineal,
Patriarchal, Patrilocal, Patrifocal
· Incest
Taboo
· Adaptation/procreation/reproduction
Linguistics:
·
Language: System of communication governed by
rules, resulting in meanings that are shared by all who speak the same
language.
·
Linguistics: Descriptive, Historical, Cultural
·
Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis/Linguistic Relativity
Hypothesis: Language determines reality.
·
Code switching: Changing from one mode of
language to another.
·
Ethnolinguistics: studies the relationship
between language and culture, and the way different ethnic groups perceive the
world.
·
Socialization and Enculturation
·
Paralanguage: Focuses on how pitch, tone and
emotion convey meaning in addition to words.
·
Dialect
·
Gendered Speech
·
Language family
·
Linguistic divergence
·
Phonemes: Smallest unit of sound that makes a
difference in meaning.
·
Morphology: Patterns in language
·
Non-Verbal Communication
·
Kinesics: body language
·
Symbols: Signs that are arbitrary links to
something else that represent them in a meaningful way.
·
Sociolinguistics: How language/speech styles are
influenced by age, gender, ethnicity, class
·
Culture
o
Geertz: Symbols and meanings
o
E.B Tylor: Culture is that complex whole which
includes knowledge, belief, art, law, morals, custom, and any other
capabilities and habits acquired by man as a member of society.
·
Subjective/objective
·
Symbols
·
Meanings
o
“Man is an animal suspended in webs of
significance that he himself has spun, I take culture to be those webs, and the
analysis of it to be therefore not an experimental science in search of law but
an interpretative one in search of meaning.”
o
Culture is public because meaning is.
·
Thick description
·
Codes
·
Socialization
·
Gender socialization
·
Social construction of reality: persons and groups
interacting in a social system create, over time, concepts or mental
representations of each other's actions, and that these concepts eventually
become habituated into reciprocal roles played by the actors in relation to
each other.
·
Culture as enacted text
·
Discourse: Social communication, not limited to
speaking and writing, which gives life to ideas and makes them realities.
Discourse creates subjects and is shaped by power.
Four Field Approach to
Anthropology
Physical Anthropology
Cultural Anthropology
Linguistic Anthropology
Archaeology
Culture
Ethnocentrism
Cultural Relativism
Diversity
Culture as way of life
Culture as human trait
Eurocentrism
Afrocentrism
Culture Shock
Elements of culture:
Symbols
Language
Values
Beliefs
Culture is shaped by technology
Hunter/gatherer
Pastoralism
Horticulture
Agricultural
Industrial
Post industrial
Cultural Changes
Invention
Discovery
Diffusion
Subculture
Counterculture
Multicultural
Participant
Observation
Armchair
Anthropology
Folklore
Unofficial
vs. Official History
Oral
Traditions
Folkways:
a mode of thinking, feeling, or acting common to a given group of people
Legends/Folktales
Artifacts
Rituals
Urban
Legends
Key
People:
Bronislaw
Malinowski
Franz
Boas
Ruth
Benedict
Margaret
Mead
Bounded Theory
Unbounded Theory
Scientific Theory: An
observable, testable and correctable explanation for an observable phenomenon.
Religious Belief: unbounded,
not testable, do not uncover new knowledge
Lamark: Inheritance of
acquired characteristics
Darwin
Evolution
Natural
Selection
Struggle
for existence: Competition for scarce resources
Survival of the Fittest
Sexual selection: traits
exist to attract a species to the opposite sex
Group selection/Altruism:
sacrificing oneself for the good of the group
Adaptation
Bipedalism
Out of Africa Theory
Childhood Development in humans
Importance of cataclysmic events
Definition
of Folklore:
Folklore
is an integral part of being human. The discipline of folklore studies the
unofficial, the spoken, and the traditional forms of expressed culture, such as
legends (including urban ones), myths, folk music, jokes, festivals, and more.
It
is often contrasted with the printed word, yet the recent growth of the
internet and digital communications has brought the realms of popular culture
increasingly closer to folklore as well. Thus the field of folklore and popular
culture encompasses more than two hundred different genres such as folktales,
myths, legends, proverbs, jokes, games, folk medicine, and ethnomusicology.
Folklore, everyday
cultural forms of expression, are communicated, enjoyed, replicated, passed on,
modified, deployed and interpreted by all of us. We weave folklore effortlessly
into our daily lives, using folklore to shape and understand our world and our
place in it. We are all experts. So much so that most of the time our use and
reception of folklore goes unnoticed. Folklore operates in the realm of the obvious, taken for granted, self-evident, and thus is not designated as being open to interpretation. Thus, Folklore has been described as “quotidian” – the stuff that makes up everyday life, ordinary. But in the potential to convey meaning, create boundaries, constitute identity, and create sense out of nonsense, Folklore is anything but ordinary. Folklore, that stock of knowledge brought into specific situations, “…substantiates our belief in the connectedness and orderliness of the larger context of the everyday lifeworld.” (S. Stewart, Nonsense, pg. 11)