CIGÁN, Jakub. Remembering and displaying conversion. In Material and Visual Aspects of Rituals: An Interdisciplinary Workshop. 2020.
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Basic information
Original name Remembering and displaying conversion
Authors CIGÁN, Jakub.
Edition Material and Visual Aspects of Rituals: An Interdisciplinary Workshop, 2020.
Other information
Original language English
Type of outcome Presentations at conferences
Field of Study 60304 Religious studies
Country of publisher Czech Republic
Confidentiality degree is not subject to a state or trade secret
Organization unit Faculty of Arts
Keywords in English religious conversion; autobiographical memory; signaling theory
Tags International impact
Changed by Changed by: Mgr. Michaela Ondrašinová, Ph.D., učo 64955. Changed: 12/2/2021 16:44.
Abstract
Religious conversion represents one of the most fundamental concerns across the various disciplines of social sciences and humanities. Yet, there is no comprehensive theory of conversion or associated research program. Moreover, in the last decades, there is a decline in academic interest in the studying of conversion. There are a couple of reasons for the topic’s exhaustion. First, after more than a hundred years of study, the concept of conversion is still one of the vaguest and most theologically loaded notions connected mainly to private experience of pertaining change. Only recently has been fully brought convert as a social role and part of the group’s dynamics into consideration. The authenticity of an individual’s religious conversion must be acknowledged by others, and thus conversion has to be learned and suitably displayed, including bodily postures and emotion displays. Second, conversion research found itself in a methodological dead-end condemning scholars to a retrospective study of the past conversion process. Since the conversion is often a gradual, ongoing process open to changes and shifts, it makes no sense to isolate and reconstruct the past conversion event. Moreover, the analytical status of the convert’s account and constructive and social nature of our memories do not allow us to have direct access and accurate description of one’s experience. After detailing these pitfalls, I will argue for approaching conversion as a part of the general neutral affiliation process, including the conversion concept. The shared concept of conversion by group serves as organizing schema and narrative for reconstructing one’s memories and building identity by offering appropriate behavioral cues. In the talk, I will argue for acknowledging conversion through its demonstration events connected to behavior and ritual as well as for studying conversion as the part of the social and cultural ecology and group hierarchy.
Links
MUNI/A/0858/2019, interní kód MUName: Výzkumné trendy v současné religionistice (Acronym: VYTRESOUR)
Investor: Masaryk University, Category A
PrintDisplayed: 14/9/2024 09:19