Transcript Religion
Religion
Distinctions between Religious and Secular Phenomena?
The KEY Questions
What is religion and what are the basic
features of religions cross-culturally?
How do world religions reflect
globalization and localization?
What are some important
aspects of religious
change?
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Canada 2004
What is Religion and Magic?
Religion attempts to please supernatural forces Frazer
Religion serves society by giving it cohesion
through shared symbols and rituals – Durkheim
Religion is a “projective system” that expresses
people’s unconscious thoughts, wishes and
worries - Freud
Religion offers a “model of life” - Geertz
All social and cultural phenomena can be divided
into two domains: the ‘sacred’ and the ‘profane’
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Canada 2004
Religion and Society as ‘Models
of’ and ‘for’ Each Other
Durkheim: Religion was society ‘writ large’.
Studied totemism of Australian aboriginals.
Each clan had a totem that was considered
sacred
– Its sacred character was expressed through
prohibitions against hunting or eating the totem.
Supernatural forces of the totem
– Kinship system was exogamous clans.
– Parallel in the rules of marriage and the rules on
hunting.
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Rituals
Life-cycle rituals
– separation, transition, reintegration
Pilgrimage
– e.g. Mecca
Rituals of reversal
– Carnival
Sacrifice
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Hinduism
Over 80% of
all Hindus
live in India
Incorporates
diversity of ways
to be Hindu
Rich polytheism
Key texts:
the 4 Vedas
Temples range from
magnificent buildings
to simple canopies
Deities range from
stones to carvings
of gods
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Canada 2004
Buddhism
Founding figure Siddhartha Gautama
Started in India
No accepted single text
Followers honour Gautama’s teachings
Goal is to reach “nirvana” through
detachment.
Strong tradition of monasticism
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Judaism
• High regard for human life
• Emphasis on truth telling
• Words, both spoken and
written are important
Christianity
• A growing religion in SubSaharan Africa and Indonesia
Islam
• The youngest religion
• Culturally constructed
differences exist
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Canada 2004
Directions of Change
– Revitalization movements
– seek to reconstruct parts of religion threatened by outside
forces
– Millenarian or millenial movements:
Arise in situations of stressful cultural contact, e.g. colonial
conquest.
Promise ‘a world turned upside down’
Examples: cargo cults of Melanesia, ghost dance of the
American plains
Charisma and Routinization: (Weber)
Most religious movements arise through the actions of a
charismatic individual. However, they only become widespread
through routinization.
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Canada 2004
The KEY Questions Revisited
What is religion and what are the basic
features of religions cross-culturally?
How do world religions reflect
globalization and localization?
What are some important
aspects of religious
change?
Copyright © Pearson Education
Canada 2004