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COLLEGE OF THE HOLY CROSS DEPARTMENT OF RELIGIOUS STUDIES SPRING 2004 RELS 399-03: Ritual Studies
Joanne M. Pierce, Ph.D. Email: jpierce@holycross.edu Seminar Hours: Fridays 11:00-1:00 ; Smith 426
Course Description: This advanced seminar will offer students the opportunity to integrate their previous work in religious studies (as well as in other disciplines) using the methodology of ritual theory as a framework. For most seminar meetings, a specific topic in the area of ritual will be discussed first in the abstract, and then illuminated by consideration of a specific ritual “case” from a religious tradition or other subject area. Many of these discussions will be led by guest lecturers from the Holy Cross faculty who are experts in these specific fields. This seminar will serve as a capstone course for religious studies majors, and will offer an integrative opportunity for advanced students in other areas of study with connections to ritual theory as well.
Course Objectives: By the end of this course, students should understand basic concepts in ritual studies, and should be able to apply them to their past and present work in religious studies (scripture, world religions, Christian theology, and ethics) and related disciplines. They should then be able to extend these insightsin discussion of their own experiences of religious, secular, and personal ritual in terms of various methodological and theoretical constructions offered in the area of ritual studies. Finally, students should be able to relate aspects of ritual studies to wider social and cultural issues.
Class Policies:
Course Requirements:
Readings assigned for a class must be read before the class meeting.
Course Grades: Discussion sheets: 30% *Participation includes: Academic journal; interaction in class; class presentation of final project.
Readings Bookstore : Bell, Catherine. Ritual: Perspectives and Dimensions. Grimes, Ronald. Deeply into the Bone: Re-Inventing Rites of Passage. Mitchell, Nathan. Liturgy and the Social Sciences. Van Gennep, Arnold. Rites of Passage. Library Reserve Eck, Diana. Darśan. ERes Walter Burkert, “The Function and Transformation of Ritual Killing,” in Ronald Grimes, ed. Readings in Ritual Studies . Girard, Rene. “Violence and the Sacred: Sacrifice,” in Grimes, Readings . Goethals, Gregor. “Ritual: Ceremony and Super-Sunday,” in Grimes, Readings . Hoffman, Lawrence A. “How Ritual Means: Ritual Circumcision in Rabbinic Culture and Today,” Studia Liturgica 23 (1993) 78-97. Klawans, Jonathan. “Pure Violence: Sacrifice and Defilement in Ancient Israel ,” Harvard Theological Review (April 2001). Miles, Margaret. “Image,” in Mark C. Taylor, ed. Critical Terms for Religious Studies. Rouillard, Philippe. “From Human Meal to Christian Eucharist,” in R. Kevin Seasoltz, ed. Living Bread, Saving Cup. Blackboard Frederick Murphy, Early Judaism: the Exile to the Time of Jesus, Chapter 1.
Additional readings will be assigned: these may be web sites, handouts, or texts on ERes, Blackboard, or on reserve in the library.
Friday Class Schedule: 1) January 23: Introduction: What is Ritual? Part 1 Case Study: Your Experiences of “Ritual” Case Study: Don Doll, S.J. and VisionQuest On misuse of Native American rites: Grimes, Deeply, 117-121, 136-144 On Lakota Symbols and Ritual (MUST Read “Declaration of War…”): http://www.elexion.com/lakota/rites/index2.html Doll Interview Transcript: http://net.unl.edu/artsFeat/dondolltrans.html
2) January 29: What is Ritual? Part 2 (with comments on the Lakota) Bell , Ritual, Chapter Five; Mitchell, Chapter 1 (especially 16-27, 32-34) and Chapter 2, 35-49 Case Study: Ritual, Society, and Television Gregor T. Goethals, “Ritual: Ceremony and Super-Sunday” in Grimes, Readings . Bell , Ritual, Chapter Two (especially 38-46) [Observation exercise: Watch TV! Note presidential primary coverage and Superbowl coverage]
3) February 6: Ritual: “Seeing,”and Image Bell , Ritual, Chapter Four; Miles, “Image,” in Taylor, Critical Terms (especially 165-171). Case Study: Prof. Todd Lewis, Pūjā [ 11:00-11:30 : rituals in Campion House, living room; 11:45 : discussion in RELS seminar room in Smith] Eck, Darśan (especially chapters 1 and 2); re-read Bell , Ritual, 108-111.
4) February 13: Ritual as Play Johan Huizinga, Homo ludens: A Study of the Play Element in Culture, Chapter I (1-27) Case Study: Prof. Mat Schmalz, Healing and Play in India Grimes, Deeply, 103-107, 336-344 Bell , Ritual, 115-120 Schmalz, “A Catholic Charismatic Healer at Play in North India ” [His presentation will include: Charismatic healing meditation (“A Charismatic Healing of Memory”), Thursday 2/12, 8:30 p.m., Campion House living room; and slides on charismatic healing, Thursday 2/12, 9:00 p.m., in the RELS seminar room in Smith; both actually done during the class session itself.]
5) February 20: Ritual: Rites of Passage: Marriage and Death Van Gennep, I (short but key), VII (and VIII, if you have time) Grimes, Deeply, Chapters 3 and 4 Case Study: Prof. Nancy Andrews (CLAS): Ancient Greek/Roman Marriage Rites Readings : Homeric Hymn to Demeter, and two Catullus poems about marriage (Catullus, nos. LXI (61) and LXII (62)
6) February 27: Ritual: Rites of Passage: Birth and Initiation Van Gennep, IV and V (VI is very long, but sample it if you have time, esp. 65-74 and 93-97) Grimes, Deeply, Chapters 1 and 2 Case Study: Prof. Alan Avery-Peck (RELS): Circumcision Readings : Hoffman, “How Ritual Means: Ritual Circumcision in Rabbinic Culture and Today” “Service at a Circumcision,” from The Authorized Daily Prayer Book (1948, 1975).
7) March 5: Ritual, Purity, and Sacrifice Walter Burkert, “The Function and Transformation of Ritual Killing,” in Grimes, Readings . Douglas , Purity and Danger, 29-34 Case Study: Prof. Frederick Murphy (RELS): Purity, Ordination, and Sacrifice in Leviticus F. Murphy, Early Judaism: the Exile to the Time of Jesus, Chapter 1 (especially the section on priestly religion); see Blackboard. Rene Girard, “Violence and the Sacred: Sacrifice,” in Grimes, Readings . Jonathan Klawans, “Pure Violence: Sacrifice and Defilement in Ancient Israel,” Harvard Theological Review (April 2001); see Blackboard. Leviticus 8-9, 16 *Please bring a Bible to class! *
[NB: Some readings and events from this date on have not yet been set!]
8) March 12 - - No Class – Spring Break
9) March 19: Ritual and Meaning: Performativity Case Study: Prof. Christopher Dustin (PHIL) and Prof. Johanna Ziegler (VAHI): What does ritual “do” and what does it “do” to us? C. Dustin, “The Liturgy of Theory.”
10) March 26: Ritual and Purity Douglas, Purity and Danger, 34-40 (dirt), 94-99, 112-113 (power), 114-128 (external boundaries) Case Study: Prof. Ibrahim Kalin: Ritual Ablutions and Purity of Life in Islam Optional event: Friday worship at a mosque with Prof. Kalin General Information on Muslim worship: (click on Mosque and Religious button on left, then choose on Prayer. Also look at the sections on the Hajj and the Fast.) See also: http://www.arches.uga.edu/~godlas/practices.html#Prayer http://www.uga.edu/islam/
11) April 2: [Note: The date and time of this class will have to be rescheduled] Ritual and Catholic Liturgy (here, the Eucharist/Mass) Mitchell, Chapter 2, 49-end, and Chapter 3 Tom Driver, “Transformation: The Magic of Ritual” in Grimes, Readings . Philippe Rouillard, “From Human Meal to Christian Eucharist,” in Seasoltz, Living Bread. Case Study: Prof. Pierce, Reform of the Catholic Mass Readings : The Order of Mass 1962 (Tridentine Rite) and 2001 (Vatican II) are on ERes; feel free to refer to them. [Ahead of time: Tridentine Rite Mass; Vatican II Rite masses: 11:30 a.m. Sunday Mass in St. Joseph ’s Chapel; 7:00 p.m. Sunday Mass in Mary Chapel; 12:05 noon (or 10:00 p.m. ) weekday Mass in the McCooey Chapel]
[Ritual event TBA: The Life of a Biblical Symbol: Jacob’s Ladder Exhibit in the Cantor Art Gallery , March 10-April 16 Read: Genesis 28: 10-22]
12) April 9 - - No Class – Easter Recess [Ritual event: Attend a celebration of the Catholic Easter Vigil] [Ritual event TBA in April: Japanese Tea Ceremony]
13) April 16: Ritual and Feminist Liturgy Case Study: Profs. Alice Laffey, Mary Hobgood, and Rosemary Carbine (RELS) Readings : TBA
14) April 23: Ritual: Conclusion: What is Ritual? Part 3(+) (Note: and what should be “done” with it?) Bell , Ritual, Chapter Eight Grimes, Chapter Five and Conclusion *Case Studies: Student presentations of final projects (4)
15) April 30: *Case Studies: Student presentations of final projects (8) *These presentations are limited to 15 minutes!
[16) Wednesday, May 5: Study Days Begin]
*Final Projects Due: Monday, May 10*
NOTE: The above schedule and procedures in this course are subject to change in the event of extenuating circumstances.
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