The Anthropological Study of Religion
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Transcript The Anthropological Study of Religion
THE ANTHROPOLOGICAL STUDY OF
RELIGION
Chapter 1
INTRODUCTION
People like to make sense of their world and explain
occurrences
They often use religious beliefs to do this
We will study different religions using
The comparative approach
No judgment
An open mind
Cultural relativity
A method that tries to find similarities
Anthropology studies all aspects of being human
It uses different perspectives
Holism (or being holistic): looks at integrated parts to get
the whole picture
ANTHROPOLOGY
Definition: the study of humankind
Four branches:
Cultural
Studies culture, or learned, transmitted behavior of
living people
Archaeology
Studies culture of past societies by analyzing artifacts
Linguistic
Studies study construction and evolution of language
Physical/biological
Studies relationship of biology and culture
HOLISTIC APPROACH
Anthropologist study a narrow focus of a population for
long periods of time
They use participant observation
We call small, traditional groups of people small-scale
instead of primitive
Examples: hunter/gatherers, nomads
We study smaller populations to look for human
universals and to study the range of variation in humans
VARIATION
How many religions are there in the world?
Is there variation within religions?
THE STUDY OF SOCIETIES
How do anthropologists collect data?
Fieldwork: moving to the society under study and immersing
yourself in that culture
Involves participant observation
Ethnography: a written account of how a human population
lives
We organize societies into cultural areas: geographic areas in
which societies tend to share cultural traits
Examples: subsistence or technology
Hunting and Gathering (aka HG or foraging)
Agriculture (cultivation)
Pastoralism (herding)
Industrialism
ETHNOGRAPHIC EXAMPLE
The Fore of New Guinea
New Guinea, horticulturalists, 1950s
Many suffered from unknown disease called kuru or
shaking disease
Affected women more
ETHNOGRAPHIC EXAMPLE
Medical team needed to take holistic approach
Discovered that disease was caused by prions
Fore contracted prions by eating their relative’s remains
(especially brains) at funeral ceremonies
Fore thought disease was from sorcery
Do the Kore and Western doctors view this disease in the
same way?
How would this affect those with the disease?
WAYS TO VIEW CULTURE
An anthropologist (or any researcher) cannot be 100%
objective
Anthropology unlocked the answer of kuru, not medical
knowledge
Holism involves viewing something from the insider
(emic) and outsider (etic) perspectives
Both views provide a holistic picture
Keep this in mind while reading the novel for this class
CULTURAL RELATIVISM
It is difficult to not judge others’ cultural practices
We have to be careful of ethnocentrism
Belief that one’s own culture is superior
Can cultures or beliefs be superior/inferior?
Take the stance of cultural relativism
POSTMODERNISM
Is it possible to understand the “true” meaning of
another's culture or about the world?
Cultural knowledge and viewpoints are social
constructions
There are multiple ways to see the world
There are no right or wrong practices or beliefs
We take a middle approach:
Non-judgment is objective
Postmodernism is subjective
NOVEL
While reading the novel, work on the study guide (posted
on portal)
You want to pay attention to the different ways the family
and Western doctors explain and treat the child’s disease
Look for examples of ethnocentrism and cultural
relativism
Try to see the story from both sides
Ask yourself what you would do in that situation
Quiz #1 is on March 13
HUMAN RIGHTS
One main goal of
anthropology is to study
things in context
What about human
rights?
Can we view a practice
and understand its
meaning but still think
it is wrong?
Cannibalism
Revenge killings
Infanticide
Female genital mutilation
WHAT IS CULTURE?
It is a “complex whole”
Culture gives meaning to reality
Culture
Is not biological
Is learned by living in that group
Is shared by members of a group
Accounts for differences between groups of people
Based on symbolism
Culture is highly variable and changes quickly
DEFINING RELIGION
How do we define religion?
Discuss with your group and come up with a simple
definition of religion
DEFINING RELIGION
How do we define religion?
Use operant definitions so we can observe and study
religion
We use analytic definitions to explain how it is expressed
We use functional definitions to explain social functions
We us essentialist definitions to show that much of the
core parts of religion are extraordinary
We use supernatural classifications to explain things not
explained in the natural world
DEFINING RELIGION
So, religion deals
with
The supernatural
Not of this world
The sacred
Things to be respected
Animism
Belief in spirits
Ritual
Symbolic and repeated
behavior
Worldview
Perception of reality
Explanations
Social control
Concept of right and
wrong/good and evil
VIDEOS
Next we’ll watch two short videos on ancient
religions
As you watch, practice cultural relativity and
comparative approach
What aspects are similar between the two
ancient religions?
EXAMPLES OF ANCIENT RELIGIONS
Hammurabi
Ancient Egypt
https://www.khanaca
demy.org/testprep/ap-arthistory/ancientmediterraneanAP/ancient-near-eastAP/v/law-code-steleof-king-hammurabi-792-1750-b-c-e
https://www.khanaca
demy.org/testprep/ap-arthistory/ancientmediterraneanAP/ancient-egyptAP/v/judgement-inthe-presence-of-osiris-hunefer-s-book-ofthe-dead
THE STUDY OF RELIGION
One aspect of studying religion is to try to see what
purpose the religion has
THEORETICAL APPROACHES
1. Evolutionary approach
Evolution of culture (simple to complex)
Animism
Judgment and ethnocentrism
2. Marxist approach
Religion is created by those in power
“opiate of the masses”
THEORETICAL APPROACHES
3. Functional approach
What is religion’s role in society?
Collective conscious, promotes social cooperation
Gives society rules to be integrative
Gives comfort or reason during hard times
THEORETICAL APPROACHES
4. Interpretive approach
Make sense of culture by studying meaning
Symbols represent things and direct human
behaviors
5. Psychosocial approach
Connection between society and the individual
Freudian
BIOLOGICAL BASIS
What we think is real is really a creation of our
brains
We get cues from the environment and our brains
Can certain religious experiences be created by
brain?
Out of body experience,
Talking in tongues
Need to consider all aspects to be holistic
BELIEFS IN SPIRITS
Most cultures believe in spirits
Anthropomorphic means treating non-human things in a
human way
Theory of mind allows us to think we understand what
other beings are feeling
Empathy
Critical for living in social systems
This may lead into the supernatural
Maybe a way to control or understand nature
EVOLUTION OF RELIGION
Maybe it evolve as a way to ensure cooperation
Or to enforce kinship
Or to stabilize society and people’s behavior
Our cognition sees two representations of the world:
The physical
The psychological
We impose our hopes and desires onto things and can
“see” what we want to see (even if it is not there)
RELIGIOUS BEGINNINGS?
There is evidence that
human ancestors had
religious thought
Homo heidelbergensis
At least 600,000 years ago
Buried dead
Symbolic pink handaxe
Homo neanderthalensis
At least 250,000 years ago
Buried dead
Used flowers in graves
DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
1. Describe what it means to be holistic
2. Describe why it is important to have cultural relativism
3. Identify three religious ceremonies you have
participated in
4. Do you think there is a biological basis for religious
beliefs? Or is religion entirely social?
ASSIGNMENT
Read “Body Ritual of the Nacirema” and work on
questions in group