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Rituals

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Title: Rituals


1
Rituals
  • Chapter 4

2
Part I
3
Introduction
  • Ritual can be defined as patterned, recurring
    sequence of events
  • When these acts involve religious symbols,
    prayers, reading or saying sacred words, etc. it
    is a religious ritual

4
The Basics
  • Religious rituals are a lot like plays. They
    have
  • Actors (shamans or priests)
  • Words (prayers, spells, sacred text)
  • Sets (altar, church, mosque)
  • Props (incense, masks, robes)
  • They also have music and dancing

5
The Basics
  • So what makes a play not a religious ritual?
  • It is not to entertain
  • The audience actively participates

6
The Basics
  • Religious practices most commonly have ritual and
    myth
  • These are tied to worldview
  • Audience participates and rituals help stabilize
    society and unify the group

7
The Basics
  • What are some familiar religious rituals?

8
The Basics
9
Types of Rituals
  • Prescriptive rituals required to be performed
  • ex. Command to keep Sabbath holy
  • Situational rituals spontaneous, can be during
    times of crisis
  • Sept. 11th

10
Types of Rituals
  • Periodic/Calendrical rituals performed on a
    regular basis
  • ex. Sunday church, Passover, Ramadan
  • Occasional rituals performed when the need
    arises
  • Marriage ceremonies, funerals

11
Classification of Rituals
  • Anthony Wallace created categories of types of
    rituals
  • Pg. 79
  • Include rituals that try to
  • Control nature
  • Heal the sick
  • Maintain peace in a community
  • Rites of passage (stages in life cycle)

12
Technological Rituals
  • Attempt to control or influence nature
  • Used with hunter/gatherers or people who rely on
    nature for survival
  • Common among Native American groups
  • Ex. Thanking an animal that you have hunted for
    its meat and skin

13
Technological Rituals
  • Read the Inuit creation myth (pg. 81)

14
Technological Rituals
  • Seal hunts are part of their survival
  • Success depends on Mother of the Sea
  • Seals have souls and rituals pay respect to seals
    they hunt
  • Creation myths, world views influence rituals

15
Lakota buffalo ritual
16
Protective Rituals
  • Are used before dangerous activities
  • May be done before each activity or when an
    unexpected event occurs
  • Ex. The Vikings blooded the keel of a new ship
    (human sacrifice)
  • Today we break a bottle of champagne on a new ship

17
Social Rites of Intensification
  • These maintain normal functioning of society
  • Teach good/evil moral/immoral how to act/how
    not to act
  • Ex. Sabbath, Easter, Rosh Hashanah (rituals can
    belong to more than 1 category)
  • Ex. Jewish practice of reciting kaddish at
    someones funeral
  • Reaffirms their faith

18
Offerings and Sacrifices
  • Many rituals try to communicate with deities
  • People give gifts, bribes, money, etc. in the
    hopes the gods will return the favor
  • The difference is that in a sacrifice blood is
    shed and in an offering gifts are exchanged

19
Offerings and Sacrifices
  • Human sacrifices have been common through history
  • Aztecs fed human blood to the Sun so the world
    would not end
  • Those sacrificed believed they would become gods
  • Would cut open the chest and remove victims
    still-beating heart
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vmk2E1CoGe98

20
Assignment
  • Read and discuss handout on sacrifices in your
    groups.

21
Healing Rituals
  • Cultures have different explanations for what
    makes people sick
  • Ethnobotany is using medical plants to help cure
    people
  • We have made many common drugs out of medicinal
    plant knowledge

22
Healing Rituals
  • Therapy rituals focus on curing those who are
    sick
  • Anti-therapy rituals are those that try to bring
    illness, accident, or death to others
  • Ex. Fore of New Guinea take a something
    associated with an enemy, recites a spell and
    buries it. They believe this will cause person to
    develop kuru

23
Video
  • Taboo Healing Rituals
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?v2R_5Hkm4AR8
  • What types of healing rituals are in the videos?
  • What elements from lecture are demonstrated?
  • Do these rituals work? Explain your answer

24
Part II
25
Salvation and Revitalization
  • Salvation rituals involve a person changing in
    some way, usually being possessed or having
    altered state of consciousness
  • Revitalization rituals aim to return to the
    traditional way of doing things

26
Rites of Passage
  • These are rituals that mark a certain life stage
    or the transition of status
  • Ex are birth, naming rites, puberty, marriage,
    death
  • In some societies naming rites are delayed
    because of high infant mortality
  • Other examples circumcision, bat mitzvahs,
    quinceaneras,

27
Rites of Passage
  • These can also be coming-of-age rituals,
    especially to mark puberty
  • Also called initiations
  • Girls are usually separated from the group
  • Initiations are usually more complex for boys
    than for girls
  • Rituals involve separation, modifying body,
    wearing different clothes, getting a different
    name, etc.

28
Rites of Passage
  • Initiations has an important phases
  • Liminality ambiguous phase during the change
  • Usually there is communitas, or the bonding of
    everyone going through the same phase
  • Rites are very difficult and show that the person
    can be an adult (pain, separation)
  • In the US, military initiation is a rite of
    passage. Describe why

29
(No Transcript)
30
Initiation with Pain
  • Taboo Initiation
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vd2GmB5sNZeQ
  • Questions
  • What is the purpose of the initiation ceremony?
  • What aspects from lecture are demonstrated?

31
Altering the Body
  • Can be temporary or permanent
  • Often during rites of passage
  • Includes tattooing, piercing, and scarification

32
Permanent Altering
  • Tattooing, branding, stretching, circumcision
  • Tattoo is Tahitian for to mark or strike
  • What are social implications in the US about
    tattoos?
  • They can mark social identity

33
Horimono tattoo Some African tribes use
Scarification Pay homage to ancestors stretching
to show wealth as initiation
34
Video
  • Taboo Marks of Identity
  • Questions
  • How do the neck rings and tattoos mark these
    groups cultural identities?
  • How are these considered rituals?

35
Genital Cutting
  • Circumcision is very common and also accepted in
    Western cultures
  • What is the reason for doing it?
  • Male circumcision is a common rite of passage
  • Though much older and no anesthesia or scalpels
  • Initiations should show pain tolerance

36
Genital Cutting
  • There is one practice that is almost universally
    condemned
  • Female circumcision or clitoridectomy in which
    the clitoris and/or labia are removed
  • Vaginal opening can be sewn almost shut
  • Keeps a woman pure until her husband has sex
    with her
  • Female domination, health issue, human rites
    issue

37
In-Class Assignment
  • ICA 3 Article on FGM

38
Pilgrimages
  • Sacred places occur in creation myths and these
    become places worshipers visit
  • Muslims ? Mecca
  • Jews and Christians ? Jerusalem
  • Hindus ? River Ganges
  • May also be sites of miracles

39
Religious Obligations
  • Actions performed by a group or individual
  • Saying grace, kissing a mezuzah (on doorway),
    lighting a candle
  • We know of behaviors that are appropriate for
    religious rites, but how do we know what is
    inappropriate?

40
Tabu or Taboo
  • Tabu means things that are restricted, forbidden,
    or off limits
  • In marriage, incest is usually a tabu
  • In a Polynesian chiefdom, the chief is sacred
    because he was given power by the gods.
    Everything he touches is sacred, so he is carried
    everywhere
  • Jewish tradition of keeping kosher
  • Prohibits pork
  • Rules for slaughter and preparation

41
Discussion
  • 1. What are rituals performed in your own culture
    (at school, work, at sporting events, religious
    ceremonies, etc.)?
  • 2. Discuss a rite of passage you have had or have
    attended. Identify the phases.
  • 3. How do we identify adulthood in the US? Is
    there a specific rite of passage for this? Is
    there a formal marker of adulthood?
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