NOTES
ON ASPECTS OF RITUAL AND IDEOLOGY
Mapping
the Field of Ritual (Grimes)
We
need both inter-subjective and analytical processes to understand ritual. All interpretive efforts are surrounded
by implicit questions, making some explicit insures grounds for discussion. The
kind of questions one asks as well as the way one thinks about those questions
determine both the methods and style used in an investigation. These then are used as a basis for our
theoretical formulations. Theory defines how we account for and sometimes
predict regular patterns of co-variance and provides for the criticism of
methods. In order to conduct an investigation of ritual in the field,
anthropologists often will ask a number of key questions that help them define
the characteristics of the ritual event. These generally include the following
kinds of questions (Taken from Grimes, 1995. Beginnings in Ritual Studies, pp. 24-38):
1. Kinds of questions used to analyze
ritual events
a. Ritual
space - Natural setting? Boundaries -
rigid/flexible, clear? Permanence? Access? History? Shape? Size?
b. Ritual
objects - what & how many?
Making & history ritualized? Nature of power associated w/ it? Owned? Status of keeper?
c. Ritual
time/timing - Time of day/season?
More than one calendar? Coordination w/ natural cycles? Coincide/conflict w/
ordinary social time? Duration of ritual?
d. Ritual
sound and language - Non-linguistic
sounds? Presume literacy? Importance of language to performance of rite?
e. Ritual
identity - Ritual roles and offices
of significance? What groups
receive ritual recognition? Who is excluded? Feelings while performing vs. after experience? What emphasized - action, feeling,
thought, or intention?
f. Ritual
action - Kinds of actions performed?
Parts of body emphasized? Senses
used most often? Activity or passivity most pronounced? Actions inner or outer
directed?
2. Interpreting
ritual Questions are aimed at uncovering indigenous responses, emic
categories. Interpreting (even in
the questions asked) has an etic dimension. A number of theoretical options that have been used
include:
a. Describing
ritual's phenomenology (Eliade, VanGennep);
b. Identifying
underlying structures as a symbol system (Geertz), metalanguage (Bateson),
structure (Levi-Strauss);
c. Considering
its social functions (Durkheim), covariants (Douglas), processes in social
fabric (Turner), roles (Goffman);
d. Considering
how it is related to individual and group psychology and thus regarding ritual
as a set of archetypes (Jung); mazeways (Wallace); developmental stages
(Erikson);. or games (Huizinga, Caillois);
e. Explaining
it as an ecological (Rappaport) or biogenetic (d'Aquili; Laughlin) operation
f. Tracing
historically and theologically its precedents & consequences
g. Entering
into imaginative participation and concentrating on style of constructing
life-worlds (Ricoeur) or ultimate realities (Tillich)
Modes of Ritual Sensibility
Grimes discusses 6 modes of ritual sensibility which characterize the different
ways in which ritual may function within our lives. These include the
following:
1. Ritualization - stylized
repeated gesturing and posturing, the ritual part of ordinary life.
2. Decorum - from
civic, social life, Goffman "interaction ritual", patterning that
leads to expectations that become part of tacit culture, conventionalized
behavior.
3. Ceremony -
less ordinary, more intentional, different from decorum in that is a large
group socio-political interaction; e.g, courtroom sessions, Turner's
"social drama", sometimes conflict ladden, power, a central
consideration
4. Liturgy - any
ritual action with an ultimate frame of reference and doing which is felt of
cosmic necessity, zen meditation, shamanic trance, spiritual exercise,
"re-present" events in enactments, "eventualize"
structures.
5. Magic -
pragmatic ritual work, means of influencing the supernatural/unknown
6. Celebration -
root, play, form of expressive ritualized play.
Religious Specialists (Shamans, Priests and
Prophets) and the Way of the Shaman
A.
Definitions/ Overview of Religious Specialists -- Characteristics of religious specialists‹are
present in almost all societies, however, the emphasis on religious specialists
is greater in food producing societies. The more complex the society, the more
likely it is to have religious intermediaries. An anthropological approach also focuses on studying the
functions of religion and its specialists within society. Roles become more problematic with the
issue of defining what is religion (vs magic and the occult). Significant points of Turner's
discussion of religious specialists, distinction between magic (manipulation of
an impersonal transhuman controlling power by magicians) and religion
(personalized transhuman controlling power--spirits, ghosts, ancestors, gods,
etc.). Most cultures contain a
combination of both.
1. Priest
- Priest is associated with functioning of a regularly organized and
permanent enterprise, full-time occupation, petitions supernatural (thru
prayer, supplication) on behalf of congregation/community; authority derived
from service in sacred tradition (oft marked by calendrical series of rituals);
power is based on learned standarized ritual lore; are usually found in
agricultural or more complex food-producing societies. Priests rarely are innovative,
"dramatists" (office, role and script are sacred not the person) --
are institutional functionaries.
2. Shaman
and Medium - Usually contrasted w/ role of priest, shamans are usually
personally called (via a "divine stroke"), part-time specialists,
predominate in foraging societies; their primary role is as a curer for
individual clientele (within the family context). Emphasis is on their ability to manipulate the supernatural
world. Their control over spirits makes a shaman a distinctive type of spirit
medium (medium - one is controlled by a spirit and can serve as a means of
communication with supernatural world).
Operates in a person to person fashion; shamans & mediums are
classified together with prophets as inspirational functionaries. Shamans usually work in small-scale,
"folk" communities (marked by mechanical solidarity); prophets come
in when society is becoming more stratified or impacted from without.
3. Divination
and Doctors. Divination
focuses on inquiry about future events directed to deity who responds w/
tokens, or analysis of past events (e.g., to determine guilt). Preliterate societies, divination and
therapy (doctor/curer) are closely intertwined; illness viewed as attack on
soul by others--often denotes tension in social fabric.
4. Note
distinctions between types of societies re: religious specialists. In complex societies, religion is
limited to its own domain and is often closely tied to politics.
B.
Significance of Shamanic Perspective. Shamanism is a very old,
coherent, broadly diffused mental paradigm; draws its powers of persistence
from its capacity to organize knowledge about the world by way of a simple set
of symbols and assumptions.
Premises: (a) spiritual
force that all humans experience is ambient, of the world, cosmos and
everything in it; birth, death, illustrate capacity of spirit to move thru
material forms. Are two ways to view the divine: as a transcendent Creator out
there (Eurocentric/Western view) or as an immanent creation potentially manifest
everywhere (shamanic view); (b)
shamanism can function as guide in complex societies as a way or organizing
knowledge about the world which can help us meet the challenge of rethinking
our relationship to the lifesystem that spawned us all (From: Freidel, Schele, & Parker, 1993, Maya
Cosmos, Three Thousand Years on the Shaman's Path,
pp.12-13).
1. Note
main points of Langdon's discussion of shamanism and anthropology (key for
Eliade, significance of estatic state/shamanic trance (relationship between
shaman and spirits - seeks to control them for specific purpose); focus on
various forms and expressions as a dynamic cultural-social complex in various
societies. Notes issues of
concern: (a) debates re: psychic
stability of shamans (need to look at collective representations vs. external
behavior to understand normality/marginality, is culturally relative); (b)
effectiveness of role in therapy, (shamans access altered states at will,
fulfill needs of community, mediate between sacred & profane); (c) problems in defining as a form of magic
or religion -- early anthropologists classed it as magic, distinguishing it
from religion; need to recognize shamanism as a central expression of the
worldview of a culture that is not separate from the ideological system of
which it is a part.
2.
Importance of symbolic anthropological perspective (work of Geertz,
Turner, Douglas etc.) in understanding nature and functions of shamanism,
concern with symbolic representations in ideological systems and rituals as
well as their relationship to society and human motivation. Shamans mediate between worlds and are
thus liminal.
3.
Langdon also notes that a key concept of many shamanic systems is
concept of power which enables shaman to mediate between extra-human and
human and legitimizes his/her various social roles w/in society. A South American shaman is distinct
from ordinary individuals in his/her power illustrated in (a) mastery of
ecstatic state leading to the (b) acquisition of auxiliary spirits thru this experience
and (c) attainment of (power) songs.
4.
Harner's main points; significance of cognicentrism (view that our way of knowing and understanding
things is the only viable/most "correct" one, that other views of the
world are thus less valid/"true", i.e., "superstitious");
concept of non-ordinary reality (N.O.R); means of approaching non-ordinary
reality; discuss major features of the shamanic journey, significance of power
animals, techniques used to restore power and extract harmful intrusions.
5. Note
major features of Turner's concept of structure --
organization of statuses, roles and norms, features of hierarchy,
classification, differentiation, stability; and anti-structure -- reverse of structure, exists outside structure,
between structural categories (e.g. as seen in 3 stages of rites of passage
(1) separation, (2) transition--liminality and communitas, and (3)
incorporation) and at the bottom of structure. Power of anti-structure lies in perception of it with
ambivalence (as the liberation of human spirit and a potential threat to social
order).