MYTH AND RITUAL IN PRELITERATE SOCIETY ANT 4360

Garrett 254-710-4433MMSCI 318

Office Hours: T 12:30-3, W 10-2, Th 12:30-2, F 1-3

I sometimes have to attend meetings during office hours. You are welcome to drop by, but an email in advance may be used to confirm an appointment.

SYLLABUS AND PROSPECTUS

INTRODUCTION

This is really a course in the anthropology of religion, but as the title suggests we approach this topic mainly through myth and ritual, especially in the context of the religious life of traditional societies. The term mythology refers to the stories which explain and justify a way of life, and account for the origins of a people, their culture and its major institutions, and the world order.[1] Perhaps most importantly in my view a myth is the story that an individual or a community believes that it is living. Defined in this way, myth may be understood as a special kind of literature, even when it is not written. In traditional societies where myths take on conventional relatively static forms and endure for long periods of time they recount the exploits of culture heroes, of exemplary beings whose lives and doings establish and justify a way of life, and they also offer guidance and models for living. Myths are the charters for cultures and for their constituent institutions, and often provide scripts for rites of passage and of renewal. They are one important medium for the expression of the culture's principal themes.

Rituals may be any stereotyped behaviors called forth in predictable circumstances[2], but within the larger set of rituals there are more elaborate core rituals. They are enactments of the major themes of a culture, providing armatures, symbolic metaphorical models, which are clothed with cultural detail and trappings that add richness to a culture's institutions. Core rituals occur predictably at crisis points in temporal cycles, eg. seasons, political accessions, life cycle transitions, etc. Some rituals are direct enactments or re-enactments of narrative mythology and may take a quasi-narrative form, for example a dance drama or a pilgrimage that re-enacts the activities of founders of the world order. Often in major cultural performances narrative mythology and ritual are combined in multi-media events that mark the most significant temporal passages.

In anthropology myth and ritual are the principal documents from which thematic interpretations of cultures are derived. This course offers a review of the major findings of cultural anthropology about the roles and meanings of myth and ritual as elements in expressive cultures and religions, technical instruction in describing and analyzing myth and ritual, and an overview of several influential theoretical frameworks for relating myth and ritual to social functions, to processes of societal change, and to emotional, developmental and cognitive psychology. The examples and case studies that will be investigated emphasize traditional tribal and peasant societies, but you will also be challenged to try to apply the models and methods to contemporary American expressive culture.

REQUIRED TEXTS

The Heathens by William Howells

The Hero with a Thousand Faces by Joseph Campbell

Ritual and Belief by David Hicks

EVALUATION AND GRADING

1.Unit exams and unit writing assignments (60%)

Structuralism and cosmogony-Genesis and the Popol Vuh

The morphology of the hero tale- Propp, Campbell and Popol Vuh

An analytical comparative essay on pilgrimages

Ethnographic and interpretive account of a ritual

Ritual symbols and their meanings- the Holy Ghost People

Exams on readings from Howells and Hicks

2.Research Project (30%) Combined ethnographic and literature research or literature research on a narrative myth or core ritual describing it in cultural context and explicating its symbolism, meanings and social and psychologicalfunctions.

3.Class participation and formal presentations (10%)

4.Attendance Bonus: 2 points added to final grade if you do not miss any classes.

UNITS AND COURSE STRUCTURE

Natural history of the supernatural

Morphology of myths and rituals: structuralism and psychoanalytical theories

Functionalisms: sociological and psychological theories

Cross cultural patterns of belief and practice: animism, magic, and souls, shamans and priests, witches and sorcerors, ancestors, gods, priests

The emergence of new cults and religions

[1]For the native participant the core (often religious) mythology is conceived as "history" and is unquestionably true. For the analyst mythology is understood as ideological and psychological material having a history and related to the history of the carriers of the tradition, but not "true" in the empirical scientific or historical sense.

[2] One useful way to separate ritual from habit is to stipulate that ritual refers to the symbolic expression of the sentiments attached to a situation.