RELIGIOUS MOVEMENTS AND SOCIAL CHANGE - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 30
About This Presentation
Title:

RELIGIOUS MOVEMENTS AND SOCIAL CHANGE

Description:

... as The Children of God (COG) Founded. in 1968 Huntington Beach, California ... Anti-COG movement (1971) FREECOG = 'Free Our Children from the Children of God' ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:86
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 31
Provided by: tgr3
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: RELIGIOUS MOVEMENTS AND SOCIAL CHANGE


1
RELIGIOUS MOVEMENTS AND SOCIAL CHANGE
  • Introduction to the course

2
Peoples Temple (Jonestown) I
  • November 18, 1978
  • mass suicide in Jonestown, Guyana
  • Members of Peoples Temple Christian Church
  • 914 people dead, 276 of them children
  • Including James (Jim) Warren Jones
  • following a killing of Congressman Leo Ryan

3
Peoples Temple (Jonestown) II
  • founded by James (Jim) Warren Jones in 1955.
  • Pentecostal leaning
  • campaign for racial integration as its primary
    cause
  • 20 African American
  • 1977
  • under scrutiny for illegal practices and tax
    evasion
  • relocation to Jonestown, Guyana
  • conditions not as expected 
  • supreme authority of James Jones
  • Concerned Relatives
  • 1978
  • Leo Ryan sent to investigate

4
Other mass suicides
  • The Movement for the Restoration of Ten
    Commandments of God
  • 2000 Uganda (300 - ? dead)
  • Heaven's Gate
  • 1997 - San Diego, CA (39 dead)
  • Order of the Solar Temple
  • 1997 - Canada (5 dead)
  • 1995 France (16 dead)
  • 1994 - Switzerland (48 dead)
  • 1994 Canada (5 dead)
  • Other
  • Vietnam
  • 1993 52 dead
  • Mexico
  • 1990 12 dead
  • 1991 29 dead
  • South Korea
  • 1987 - 32 dead

5
Branch Davidians I
  • February 28, 1993
  • BD compound at Mount Carmel in Waco led by David
    Koresh
  • raided by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and
    Firearms (BATF)
  • suspected of firearms violations
  • six Davidians and four BATF agents die
  • FBI takes over and starts a siege lasting for 51
    days
  • abuse of children?
  • April 19, 1993
  • compound attacked with tanks
  • Koresh and 75 of his followers die (including 21
    children)
  • Suicide, gassing, fire?

6
Branch Davidians II
  • Founded in 1929
  • By Bulgarian Victor Houteff (divine messenger of
    God)
  • Similar to Seventh Day Adventists
  • Houteff dies in 1955
  • A sequence of internal fights and divisions
  • Early 1990s
  • Vernon Howell
  • assumes leadership
  • gt David Koresh (a form of Cyrus/ Christ in
    Greek)
  • apocalypse would occur in America
  • survivalist tactics
  • stockpiling food and weapons
  • 1992 - Mount Carmel community "Ranch
    Apocalypse"

7
Aum Shinrikyo
  • June 27, 1994 sarin attack in Matsumoto
  • 7 die and hundreds injured
  • March 20, 1995 sarin attack Tokyo in subway
  • 12 die and thousands injured
  • Aum Shinrikyo
  • Founded by Asahara Shoko (born Chizuo Matsumoto)
    in 1986.
  • Aum "powers of destruction and creation in the
    universe" (Sanskrit)
  • Shinrikyo "teaching of the supreme truth"
  • Armageddon inevitable
  • political action needed to save the world (see
    Beliefs)
  • Shinrito ("Supreme Truth party") political party
    in 1989
  • unsuccessful
  • Early 1990s - shift in ideology
  • the world cannot be saved
  • new goals
  • limit the number of deaths due to apocalypse
  • protect themselves
  • gt construction of nuclear shelters and communes
  • gt production of sarin

8
The Family
  • Also known as The Children of God (COG)
  • Founded
  • in 1968 Huntington Beach, California
  • David Brandt Berg
  • "Moses David," "Mo," "Father David," and "Dad"
  • Particularities
  • incorporated the hippie lifestyle and
    anti-establishment ideology
  • Community lifestyle (colonies, tribes etc)
  • Mo Letters
  • after Berg relocated to London
  • The Laws of Moses / "Voice of God Himself"
  • Openly aggressive proselytizing activities
  • Musical groups
  • Litnessing
  • distribution of literature, specifically the Mo
    Letters.
  • Flirty Fishing by women
  • 1976-1987
  • 1 million new recruits
  • Anti-COG movement (1971)

9
The Church of Scientology I
  • Founded by Lafayette Ronald (L. Ron) Hubbard in
    1954
  • Dianetics The Modern Science of Mental Health
    (1950)
  • doctrinal/sacred book
  • influence of psychoanalysis
  • two components of the human mind
  • Analytical
  • similar to the concept of ego (Freud)
  • knowingly utilized
  • consciously awareness of this part of the mind
  • Reactive
  • beneath the analytical
  • during moments of troubling emotional and
    physical pain
  • controls the functions of the analytical
  • takes note of all the details happening
  • "recordings" "engrams"
  • remain firmly placed in the mind

10
The Church of Scientology II
  • Auditing
  • a deletion of engrams
  • "preclear" gt clear
  • restoration of full potential of the analytical
    mind
  • use of E-meter (electropsychometer)
  • measures the energy of the mind
  • Scientology
  • extends Dianetics into the realm of religious
    movements
  • essence of being human
  • soul thetan (Greek letter meaning "thought")
  • humans thetans
  • levels beyond being"clear"
  • a "bridge of total freedom"
  • OT (Operating Thetan) Bridge
  • freedom from MEST (Matter, Energy, Space, and
    Time)
  • Controversial practices, dependency creation,
    brainwashing

11
Jon Frum movement
  • New Hebrides (Vanuatu, Tanna)
  • Jon/John Frum
  • a mythic messianic figure
  • arrives with airplane on February, 15, bringing
    "cargo"
  • drives all other white people from the island
  • an army in waiting in a volcano to help him
  • 1940s
  • 300,000 American troops in the New Hebrides
  • egalitarianism of the Americans
  • wealth and power
  • gtconflation of Uncle Sam, Santa Claus and John
    the Baptist
  • the quest for independence in 1980

12
NRMs as a topic
  • Anthropology?
  • Sociology?
  • Psychology?
  • Theology?
  • Legal studies?

13
General information
  • Times Thu 12-14
  • Location Unioninkatu 38, D 113
  • Instructor Toomas Gross
  • Email toomas.gross_at_helsinki.fi
  • Phone (09) 19122645
  • Office Hours Thurs 11-12, U38 E 309
  • www http//www.helsinki.fi/antropologia/opetuso
    hjelma_kevatlukukausi_2004.htm

14
Course requirements
  • Essay
  • on broader theoretical issues discussed in the
    lectures
  • 5-6 pages
  • three different secondary sources
  • make your own argument
  • due on 29 April
  • Project work report
  • 8-10 pages in length
  • Case study of a particular religious movement
  • first-hand collection of data encouraged
  • focus on a particular issue or a problem
  • research question, methodology, ethnographic
    setting, analysis
  • due on 6 May

15
Evaluation
  • Essay 40
  • Project work report 60

16
Texts and reading materials
  • Required readings
  • Additional readings
  • Readers and general background literature
  • Various websites

17
2. Lecture (29.1)New religious movements
terminology, typology, and characteristics
  • Readings
  • Richardson Definitions of Cult From
    Sociological-Techincal to Popular-Negative. (in
    Dawson 1998)
  • Wilson The Problem of Definition. (in Wilson
    1970)

18
3. Lecture (5.2)New religious movements and
social change
  • Readings
  • Hunter The New Religions Demodernization and
    The Protest Against Modernity (in Wilson 1981)
  • Wallace Revitalization Movements. (in Lessa and
    Vogt 1979)

19
12.2 no lecture
20
4. Lecture (19.2)Prophets, gurus, and charisma
  • Readings
  • Bromley and Shupe The Leaders Gurus and
    Prophets, or Madmen and Charlatans? (in Bromley
    and Shupe 1981)
  • Weber Charismatic Authority / Routinization of
    Charisma (in Economy and Society)

21
5. Lecture (26.2)Ordinary members conversion
and apostasy
  • Readings
  • Bromley and Shupe Joining the New Religions
    Brainwashing or Conversion? (in Bromley and Shupe
    1981)
  • Wright Leaving New Religious Movements Issues,
    Theory, and Research (in Bromley 1988)

22
6. Lecture (4.3)NRMs in non-Western societies I
nativistic/revitalization movements
  • Readings
  • Kehoe The Ghost Dance Religion (in Lehmann and
    Myers 2001)
  • Linton Nativistic Movements (in Lessa and Vogt
    1979)

23
7. Lecture (11.3)NRMs in non-Western societies
II cargo cults
  • Readings
  • Lindstrom The Birth of Cargo Cult. (in Lindstrom
    1992)
  • Worsley Cargo Cults (in Lehmann and Myers 2001)

24
8. Lecture (18.3)NRMs in Western societies I
Movements of Christian origin
  • Readings
  • Bergman The Adventist and Jehovah's Witness
    Branch of Protestantism. (in Miller 1995)
  • Introvigne Latter Day Revisited Contemporary
    Mormon Millenarianism (in Robbins and Palmer
    1997)

25
9. Lecture (25.3)NRMs in Western societies II
Movements of non-Christian origin
  • Readings
  • Bednarowski The Church of Scientology Lightning
    Rod for Cultural Boundary Conflicts (in Miller
    1995)
  • Puttick, E. New religions and Counter-culture.
    (in Lehmann Myers 2001)

26
1.4 - Consultations
27
10. Lecture (8.4)New religious movements and
violence
  • Readings
  • Melton, Bromley Challenging Misconceptions abou
    the New Religions Violence Connection (in
    Bromley and Melton 2002)
  • Robbins Source of Volatility in Religious
    Movements. (in Bromley and Melton 2002)

28
11. Lecture (15.4)Secularization The end of
religion?
  • Readings
  • Stark and Bainbridge Secularization, Revival,
    and Cult Formation (in Dawson 1998)
  • Wilson Secularization The Inherited Model (in
    Hammond 1985)

29
Deadlines
  • 29.4 - Essay deadline
  • 6.5 - Project work report deadline
  • Grades posted in the department and feedback
    (20.5)

30
Additional readings by topics
  • Terminology Sect, cult, church
  • Religious and social change
  • Millenarianism / Apocalypticism
  • Charisma, leadership, gurus, prophets etc
  • Conversion
  • Brainwashing
  • Apostasy
  • Revitalization and nativistic movements
  • Cargo cults
  • Other religious movements in non-Western
    societies
  • Religious movements in Western societies
    (non-Christian)
  • Religious movements in Western societies
    (Christian)
  • Religion and violence
  • Secularization
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com