Title: Spirituality, Religion, and the Supernatural
1Chapter 24
- Spirituality, Religion, and the Supernatural
2Chapter Outline
- The Anthropological Approach to Religion
- The Practice of Religion
- Rituals and Ceremonies
- Religion, Magic, and Witchcraft
- Religion and Culture Change Revitalization
Movements - Religion and Art
3Worldview
- The collective body of ideas that members of a
culture generally share concerning the ultimate
shape and substance of their reality.
4(No Transcript)
5Religion
- An organized system of ideas about the spiritual
sphere or the supernatural, along with associated
ceremonial practices by which people try to
interpret and/or influence aspects of the
universe otherwise beyond their control.
6Spirituality
- Also concerned with the sacred but it is often
individual rather than collective and does not
require a distinctive format or traditional
organization.
7Religion
- An organized system of ideas about spiritual
reality, or the supernatural. - It consists of beliefs and practices by which
people try to interpret and control aspects of
the universe otherwise beyond their control. - Among food-foraging peoples, religion is
intertwined in everyday life. - As societies become more complex, religion may be
restricted to particular occasions.
8Supernatural Forces and Beings
- Religion is characterized by a belief in
supernatural beings and forces, which can be
appealed to for aid through prayer, sacrifice,
and other rituals.
9Supernatural Forces and Beings
- Supernatural beings may be grouped into three
categories - major deities
- ancestral spirits
- other sorts of spirit beings.
10Gods and Goddeses
- Gods and goddesses are great but remote beings
that control the universe or a specific part of
it. - Whether people recognize gods, goddesses, or both
has to do with how men and women relate to each
other in everyday life. - If more than one is recognized (polytheism), each
has charge of a particular part of the universe. - A pantheon, or the collection of gods and
goddesses such as those of the Greeks, is common
in nonwestern states.
11Ancestral Spirits
- Belief in ancestral spirits is based on the idea
that human beings are made up of a body and a
soul or vital spirit. - Freed from the body at death, the spirit
continues to participate in human affairs.
12Animism
- A belief that nature is animated or energized
through what people perceive as manifestations of
power. - Common among peoples who see themselves as part
of nature.
13Animatism
- A belief that nature is enlivened or energized by
an impersonal spiritual power or supernatural
potency.
14Priests and Priestesses
- A full-time religious specialist formally
recognized for his or her role in guiding the
religious practices of others and for contacting
and influencing supernatural powers.
15Shaman
- A person who enters an altered state of
consciousness at willto contact and utilize an
ordinarily hidden reality in order to acquire
knowledge, power, and to help others.
16The Shamanic Complex
17Rites of passage
- Rituals that mark important stages in an
individuals life cycle, such as birth, marriage,
and death. - Three stages
- Separation death - The removal of the individual
from society. - Transition - Isolation of the individual
following separation and prior to incorporation
into society. - Incorporation - Reincorporation of the individual
into society in his or her new status.
18Witchcraft
- Functions as an effective way for people to
explain away personal misfortune without having
to shoulder personal blame. - Even malevolent witchcraft may function
positively in the realm of social control. - It may also provide an outlet for feelings of
hostility and frustration without disturbing the
norms of the larger group.
19Social Functions of Religion
- Sanctioning conduct by providing ideas of right
and wrong. - Setting standards for acceptable behavior to
perpetuate an existing social order. - Lifting the burden of decision making from
individuals and placing it with the gods.
20Social Functions of Religion
- Maintaining social solidarity enhancing the
learning and ensuring continuity in a nonliterate
culture. - Building hope for a specific goal, such as
healing physical, emotional, or social ills.
21Revitalization Movements
- Arise when people seek radical reform in response
to social disruption and feelings of anxiety and
despair. - Among Melanesian islanders disturbed by Western
colonization and capitalism, these movements have
taken the form of cargo cults, which have
appeared at different times since the beginning
of the 20th century. - All religions stem from revitalization movements.
22Religion and Art
- Religion is often intertwined with artthe
creative use of the human imagination to
symbolically interpret, express, and enjoy life. - It stems from the uniquely human ability to use
symbols to give significance to the world for
more than a utilitarian purpose. - Anthropologists are interested in art as a
reflection of cultural values and concerns.
23Chapter 25
24Art
- What is art?
- Visual arts
- Verbal arts
- Musical arts
- Function of Art
25What is Art?
- In anthropology, art is the creative use of the
human imagination to aesthetically interpret,
express, and engage life, modifying experienced
reality in the process. - Can include ideas about religion, kinship, and
ethnic identity.
26Anthropology Art
- Art reflects a groups collective ideas, values,
and concerns. As anthropologists, we can
understand different worldviews, political ideas,
social values, kinship structures, economic
relations, and historical memory.
27Understanding Art
- 13 people at table, bag of money, and a spilled
salt. - Aesthetic composition fits pace, attitudes of
men, sense of movement. - Interpretation
- Narrative Record of customs, table manners,
dress, architecture of the period. - Interpretive Money is the root of all evil
spilled salt indicates disaster beliefs of
Christianity (why is the last supper important?)
28Folk Art vs. Fine Art
- Folklore (or folk art) is a term coined in the
19th century to identify unwritten stories and
other artistic traditions of rural people - It is used to distinguish between it and fine
art of the literate elite
29Art
- Three major art categories are visual, verbal,
and musical.
30Visual Art
- Visual art may be regarded as representational or
abstract. Could be drawings, sketches, paintings,
engravings, carvings, or tattoos.
31Visual Art
- In the West, art is seen as a luxury. It is
valued for its creativity, originality, and the
unique vision of the artist. - In non-Westerns societies, art is all about the
community and shared symbolism.
32Symbols
Faa aveau (starfish) motif, which is
traditionally characterized by its circular
center
Faaaliao (trochus shell) motif
Tusilii relate to linear patterns seen in items
such as coconut midribs that are used in bundles
for brooms and individually as needles
33Rock Art
- Paintings and engravings made of the faces of
rock outcroppings and in rock shelters is one of
the oldest art traditions. It usually pictures
stylized animals and abstract designs.
Anthropologists now believe these are the
depictions of a shamans dream-quest or journey.
34Tattoo Evolution
35Verbal Art
- Verbal art can be narratives, dramas, poetry,
incantations, proverbs, riddles, word games, or
even compliments or insults. - i.e., You mad mustachio purple-hued malt worm!
36Insultslike rap
- This symbol on my arm is off limits to
challengers. - You hold and bust swords, I swing the Excalibur.
. . . - Blow you to pieces, leave you covered in feces
- With one thesis.
- Every little boy wanna pick up the mike
- And try to run with the big boys and live up to
the real hype. LL Cool J - So I'm gonna let the world know the truth, you
don't want me to shine, - You studied my rhyme, then you lay your vocals
after mine. . . . - You walk around showing off your body cause it
sells, - Plus to avoid the fact that you ain't got skills
. . . - While 99 percent of your fans wear high heels.
- Now watch me rip the tat from your arm,
- Kick you in the groin, stick you for your
Vanguard award - In front of your mom, your first-, second- and
third- born, - Make your wife get on the horn,
- Call Minister Farrakhan
- So he could persuade me to squash it.
- I say, ''Naw, he started it.'' -Cannibus
37 Myth sacred story to explain the beginnings of
the world (where we came from, how it happened,
etc.)
Here is the story of the beginning,when there
was not one bird,not one fish,not one
mountain.Here is the sky, all alone.Here is the
sea, all alone.There is nothing moreno sound,
no movement.Only the sky and the sea.Only
Heart-of-Sky, alone.And these are his
namesMaker and Modeler,Kukulkan,and
Hurricane.But there is no one to speak his
names.There is no one to praise his glory.There
is no one to nurture his greatness.
38Legend
- Legend story about a memorable event or person
handed down by tradition and told as true but
without historical evidence (G. Washingtons
cherry tree)
39"Oh Goddess of Inspiration, help me sing of wily
Odysseus, that master of schemes!"
- Epic long dramatic narrative recounting the
celebrated deeds of a historical or legendary
herooften sung or recited in poetic language
40Tales
- Tale Recognized as fiction, but it usually
contains a moral or parable
41Musical Art
- Ethnomusicologists study music.
- They must be careful not to judge music on
European tonality (scale systems and
modifications for music), which uses different
scales and octaves than other music. - Music can organize, entertain, pass on political
messages, love, show inclusion in a group, or be
used for religious purposes.
42Functions of Music
- Music is a powerful identifier, i.e., whats on
your playlist?
43Function of Art
- Affirm identity totems, flags, symbols
- Used for politics or to influence events
- Explain various phenomena or to pass down history
44Functions of Art
- Art serves a wide and varied number of functions,
many of them relating to religion - setting values and standards for behavior
- identifying and reinforcing beliefs
- honoring or beseeching the aid of a deity, an
ancestral spirit, or an animal spirit.