Title: RELIGIOUS MOVEMENTS AND SOCIAL CHANGE
1RELIGIOUS MOVEMENTS AND SOCIAL CHANGE
- Introduction to the course
2Peoples 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
3Peoples 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 expectedÂ
- supreme authority of James Jones
- Concerned Relatives
- 1978
- Leo Ryan sent to investigate
4Other 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
5Branch 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?
6Branch 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"
7Aum 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
8The 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)
9The 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
10The 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
11Jon 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
12NRMs as a topic
- Anthropology?
- Sociology?
- Psychology?
- Theology?
- Legal studies?
13General 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
14Course 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
15Evaluation
- Essay 40
- Project work report 60
16Texts and reading materials
- Required readings
- Additional readings
- Readers and general background literature
- Various websites
172. 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)
183. 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)
1912.2 no lecture
204. 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)
215. 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)
226. 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)
237. 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)
248. 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)
259. 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)
261.4 - Consultations
2710. 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)
2811. 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)
29Deadlines
- 29.4 - Essay deadline
- 6.5 - Project work report deadline
- Grades posted in the department and feedback
(20.5)
30Additional 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