ABSTRACT

Although numerous studies of religious rituals have been conducted by religious studies scholars, anthropologists, sociologists, and psychologists, it is rare to find a work that brings scholars from different disciplines together to discuss the similarities and differences in their research. This book represents contributions by leading scholars from several disciplines that show the diversity of approaches to religious rituals, while also providing cross-disciplinary perspectives on this topic.

The goals of the chapters are to consider where the field currently stands in understanding religious rituals and what novel ideas can improve our knowledge about these practices; and furnish innovative applications of theory by discussing particular examples which are drawn from the authors’ fieldwork. The chapters cover Christian, Buddhist, Jewish, and Islamic rituals, thus providing a view of how ritual practices vary across the globe, but also how they share some important characteristics.

   

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

Improving our understanding of religious ritual

chapter |22 pages

Transformations

The social construction of religious ritual

chapter |23 pages

The ritual production of belonging and belief

Darwinian flesh for Durkheimian bones

chapter |19 pages

Experience, subjectivity and performance

An anthropological approach to Pentecostal rituals based on the body

chapter |20 pages

Ritual texts

Language and action in ritual

chapter |21 pages

Making it look right

Ritual as a form of communication

chapter |14 pages

Centered in time

A sociological phenomenology of religious rituals

chapter |18 pages

Mongolian livestock rituals

Appropriations, adaptations, and transformations

chapter |18 pages

“Don't forget home”

The importance of sacred ritual in families