Title: Insider/Outsider Issues in the Study of Religions
1Insider/Outsider Issues in the Study of Religions
- Kim Knott
- University of Leeds
- March 2007
2Structure of lecture
- Socio-spatial issues, including inside/outside,
container metaphor, location, standpoint - Faith, theology and the emergence of religious
studies as a scientific discipline - Participant observation and the empirical study
of religion a spectrum of standpoints - Critical issues on insider/outsider dichotomy.
3Socio-spatial issues
4Spatial issues and embodiment
- The use of insider/outsider terminology in the
study of religions implies a container concept
for religion. - Embodied philosophy of Lakoff and Johnson (1999)
conceptions of containment and inside/outside,
like other spatial concepts, are related to our
embodiment (inside the mother inside (and
outside) body, self, family, home, community).
5Spatial issues and religion
- What is the relationship between the language we
use, how we conceptualise ourselves, our
experience and the wider world, and our human
embodiment, evolution and spatial location and
relations? - And how does this question and the issues it
raises relate to the study of religion? - How we conceptualise religion/s?
- Who studies them and how?
6Location and the study of religion
- These questions are all matters of location.
- Location involves the position of things, people,
groups in relation to others. - How do we position ourselves as scholars and
students of religion in relation to the groups we
study? - We often use the word standpoint to refer to our
scholarly position (which may also be informed by
our political, religious, ethnic, gender, and
personal views).
7Religions as containers
- Insider/outsider language implies that religions
or religious groups as objects of study are
containers. - What sort of containers are they?
- What sort of boundaries do they have?
- Who is inside who outside and on what grounds?
- (Even if we theorise religions as flows, networks
or commodities, we must remember that others may
continue to refer to them as containers.)
8Faith, theology and the emergence of religious
studies as a scientific discipline
9Example Martin Stringer on religions as
containers (2002)
- In the introduction to Arweck and Stringer (eds),
Theorizing Faith The Insider/Outsider Problem in
the Study of Ritual, Stringer considers faith
as a construct, a means of excluding those who
are not deemed to be insiders, most
specifically researchers whom the religious
communities wish to keep out. (4) - He compares the construction of faith to the
construction of culture (with reference to
Wagner, The Invention of Culture, 1981).
10Stringer continued
- Faith is that which those who are religious
have, and which those who are not religious do
not have and, what is more, the non-religious
cannot understand what it is. Faith is that
which we (the insiders) have and which you
(the outsiders) do not have. (12) - Creating culture is part of a discourse that is
undertaken by dominant groups as part of their
domination of the other. Faith, I would
suggest, is almost the opposite. It is part of a
discourse undertaken by the dominated, the
threatened, in order to retain their distance,
their identity and their distinctiveness. (14)
11Faith and theology, an emic perspective
- Since the time of Anselm, many theologians have
seen the task of theology as faith seeking
understanding, an emic, insider form of
scholarly activity. - Emic studying behaviour as from inside the
system (Pike 1967 37) etic the
observersattempt to take the descriptive
information they have already gathered and to
organize, systematize, compare in a word
redescribe that information in terms of a
system of their own making. (McCutcheon 1999 17)
12Impartiality and RS an etic perspective
- The post-European Enlightenment non-theological
study of religions stressed impartiality,
objectivity, neutrality. - From that stance we saw the development of two
broad approaches the science of religion, a
reductionist, etic approach the phenomenology of
religion, which some critics have seen as
quasi-theological and emic.
13The scientific approach in RS
- The idea of a secularist scientific study of
religions is predicated on the idea of science as
an empirical approach which involves observation,
description and analysis as if from outside the
system, from a critically distant standpoint by a
professional class of researchers/observers
external to what they are researching/observing.
14The Insider/Outside Problem McCutcheons four
stances
- The autonomy of religious experience (notably
phenomenology) - Reductionism
- Neutrality and methodological agnosticism
- Reflexivity.
- R. T. McCutcheon (ed), The Insider/Outsider
Problem in the Study of Religion A Reader, 1999,
Cassell.
15Participant observation and the empirical study
of religion
16Participant observation and the empirical study
of religion a spectrum of standpoints
- In my article Insider/outsider perspectives in
J. Hinnells (ed), The Routledge Companion to the
Study of Religion (2005), I presented a spectrum
of participant/observer standpoints adopting a
model derived from the work of Junker and Gold
(Gold 1958). I illustrated four points on the
spectrum complete participant, complete
observer, observer-as-participant and
participant-as-observer.
17Insider/outsider perspectives and participant
observation in the study of religion (Knott 2005)
- OUTSIDER INSIDER
- Complete Observer-as- Participant- Complete
- observer participant as-observer participant
- llll
18Fatima Mernissi A complete but contentious
participant?
- OUTSIDER INSIDER
- Complete
- participant
- llll
19Festinger et alThe struggle to be the complete
observer
- OUTSIDER INSIDER
- Complete
- observer
- llll
20Eileen BarkerIn neutral The observer as
participant
- OUTSIDER INSIDER
- Observer-as-
- participant
- llll
21The participant as observer comes of age
Heilman, Pearson, Collins
- OUTSIDER INSIDER
- Participant-
- as-observer
- llll
22What does the spectrum show?
- The spectrum is useful for showing the
differences between different participant/observer
standpoints and for reflecting on
insider/outsider issues - But the examples used all show how fuzzy the
boundaries are between the different positions. - The separation between insider/outsider is
constantly compromised and the boundary breached,
particularly with the rise of critical challenges
from academic feminism and postmodernism.
23Critical perspectives on the insider/outsider
dichotomy
24Critical issues on insider/outsider dichotomy 1
- Who decides on who and what is inside/outside a
religion or religious group, and on the nature
and porousness of the boundary? - Who and what is inside/outside is a matter of
perspective. Different people will have
differing views. This gives us a sense of
overlapping containers. - Everyones standpoint is complex we are all
simultaneously insiders and outsiders in
different systems (on the basis of gender, race,
ethnicity, religion, status, family etc).
25Critical issues on insider/outsider dichotomy 2
- All standpoints have their own associated
interests, commitments, beliefs, values. There
are no value free positions, no view from
nowhere (see Hufford in McCutcheon). - Both insiders and outsiders, believers and
scholars are co-creators in narratives about
religion they jointly manufacture religion
(see Collins in Knott). - Reflexivity (Hufford, Davies etc).
26Hufford on reflexivity
- Because the personal religious beliefs of
scholars are diverse, scholars of religion must
recognise that they have at least two sets of
rules for discourse and problem solving rules
manifested in their personal voices and their
scholarly voices. (200) - Skepticism as a secularist value in belief
studies from suspended judgement to a
commitment to the belief that certain kinds of
traditional religious ideas are false. (303) - A reflexive analysis enables us to distinguish
among the beliefs of our informants, our
scholarly knowledge, our personal beliefs and our
occupational ideology. (306) - From Hufford in McCutcheon, 1999.
27Concluding comment
- The insider/outsider dichotomy in the study of
religions remains a good tool to think with. It
helps us to understand more about the differing
interests of those researching and those
researched. However, it tends to produce
religions as containers, something that believers
and religious adherents also do as a result of
the way they refer to themselves and those
outside the group.