
How do rituals work? Although this is one of the first questions that people everywhere ask about rituals, little has been written explicitly on the topic. In The Problem of Ritual Efficacy, nine scholars address this issue, ranging across the fields of history, anthropology, medicine, and biblical studies.For "modern" people, the very notion of ritual efficacy is suspicious because rituals are widely thought of as merely symbolic or expressive, so that - by definition - they cannot be efficacious. Nevertheless people in many cultures assume that rituals do indeed "work," and when we take a closer look at who makes claims for ritual efficacy (and who disputes such claims), we learn a great deal about the social and historical contexts of such debates. Moving from the pre-modern era-in which the notion of ritual efficacy was not particularly controversial-into the skeptical present, the authors address a set of debates between positivists, natural scientists, and religious skeptics on the one side, and interpretive social scientists, phenomenologists, and religious believers on the other. Some contributors advance a particular theory of ritual efficacy while others ask whether the question makes any sense at all.This path-breaking interdisciplinary collection will be of interest to readers in anthropology, history, religious studies, humanities and the social sciences broadly defined, and makes an important contribution to the larger conversation about what ritual does and why it matters to think about such things.
This volume investigates the fundamental question of how rituals are perceived to function and whether they possess genuine efficacy in the eyes of participants and observers. The editors, Jan Weinhold, Johannes Quack, and William S. Sax, curate a collection of essays from nine scholars across diverse disciplines, including history, anthropology, medicine, and biblical studies. The text examines the tension between modern skepticism, which often dismisses ritual as merely symbolic, and the historical or cultural perspectives that maintain ritual efficacy as a functional reality.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts recognize this collection as a significant contribution to the field of ritual studies due to its interdisciplinary breadth. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which is intended for scholars and advanced students of the humanities.
Page Count:
203
Publication Date:
2010-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190453168
ISBN-13:
9780190453169
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