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1002:8.1 [2017/09/17 02:11] – [Do secular societies have a 'sacred'?] Ryan Schram (admin)1002:8.1 [Unknown date] (current) – removed - external edit (Unknown date) 127.0.0.1
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-~~DECKJS~~ 
-# In search of prosperity # 
  
-## In search of prosperity ## 
- 
-Ryan Schram 
- 
-Mills 169 (A26) 
- 
-ryan.schram@sydney.edu.au 
- 
-September 18 and 20, 2017 
- 
-Available at http://anthro.rschram.org/1002/8.1 
- 
-### Reading ### 
- 
-Haynes, Naomi. 2015. “‘Zambia Shall Be Saved!’: Prosperity Gospel Politics in a Self-Proclaimed Christian Nation.” Nova Religio: The Journal of Alternative and Emergent Religions 19 (1): 5–24. doi:10.1525/nr.2015.19.1.5. 
-## Alternative modernity  
- 
-Brenner argues that Islamic movement does for Indonesia as 
-Protestanism did for early modern Europe, i.e.: 
- 
-Islamic movement : Indonesia : : Protestantism : Europe 
- 
-So Indonesian modernity is an "alternative" to Western modernity, but 
-for Brenner, there is a formal parallel between them. The societies 
-are changing in different ways, but the process of change is the same 
-on a deeper level. 
- 
- 
-## If there are many modernities, which one is this?  
- 
-The **multiple modernities** thesis states:  
- 
-* All societies change, but societies do not all eventually end up at 
-  the same destination. 
-* Social change cannot be measured on a single, absolute scale of 
-  progress or development. 
- 
-If there are many modernities, then Western society exists in only 
-one? What makes it different? 
- 
-## Do secular societies have a 'sacred'?  
- 
-What are the distinctive cultural values of Western modernity not 
-shared, for instance, by Indonesian modernity, Maimafu modernity, or 
-Kabre modernity? 
- 
-Western societies tend to be very secular, but as cultures, their 
-members also share a system of values? What is the idea to which 
-Western societies attribute overriding importance, that is, "sacred" 
-value? 
- 
-## The individual as a cultural construct 
- 
-Western societies tend to teach members to see themselves as 
-individuals. This has come into our discussion in several ways 
-already: 
- 
-* The person as a consumer 
-* The person as a wage laborer 
-* The person as a social actor 
- 
-Let's examine directly the idea all these have in common: The 
-individual. 
- 
-## An alternative to Weber 
- 
-Weber assumed that being an individual is natural, and hence a 
-precondition for social action. It is natural for an actor to have a 
-unique, subjective, private view of their action, and so we must take 
-their perspective as an individual to see what they create through 
-action. 
- 
-What if the individual does not exist except in our imagination?  
- 
-What if you have to be taught to see yourself as an individual, and 
-not something else? Western children are taught this from the day they 
-are able to talk. 
- 
-* What do you want to be when you grow up?  
-* What is your favorite X?  
- 
-## Christianity around the world 
- 
-When we think of the globalization of Western cultural forms, most 
-people think of commodities and mass consumption. They may also think 
-about ideologies like liberal democracy, capitalism and personal 
-achievement. 
- 
-{{:christianity-graphic-04.png|The Pew Forum of Religion and Public Life. 2011. “Global Christianity: A Report on the Size and Distribution of the World’s Christian Population- Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life.” http://www.pewforum.org/}} 
- 
-Different kinds of Christianity have also globalized, but not always 
-in the same ways or to the same places. Pentecostal Christianity 
-speads almost by word of mouth and is growing very rapidly 
- 
-* Kekchi Maya of Guatemala 
- 
-## Christianity is based on Western ideas of the individual 
- 
-* Personal, sincere confession 
-* Equality of all believers qua moral subjects 
-* Individual responsibility for one's relationship to God  
-* Christian morality is distinct from obligations entailed in social relationships 
-* God cares for human beings as individuals, not groups or as members of society 
- 
-## The Urapmin of Papua New Guinea 
- 
-* "The Holy Spirit came." (Robbins 2004, 129)  
-* The present era is a "free time." (p. 220) 
-* "When do you think the world will end?" (Robbins 1997) 
- 
-## Urapmin Pentecostalism is a contradiction in values 
- 
-* "My wife can't break off part of her belief and give it to me." (Robbins 2002) 
-* "You shouldn't talk behind the Holy Spirit's back." (Robbins 2004, 135) 
- 
-## Prosperity theology and individualism 
- 
-* Prayers to God must be answered.  
-* Health, success and wealth are what God wants for believers.  
-* Not an ascetic morality 
- 
-Is this a reflection of Western individualism, or a kind of reciprocity with God?  
- 
-## References 
- 
-The Pew Forum of Religion and Public Life. 2011. “Global Christianity: A Report on the Size and Distribution of the World’s Christian Population.” http://www.pewforum.org/ 
- 
-Robbins, Joel. 1997. “‘When Do You Think the World Will End?’: Globalization, Apocalypticism, and the Moral Perils of Fieldwork in ‘Last New Guinea.’” Anthropology and Humanism 22 (1): 6–30. doi:10.1525/ahu.1997.22.1.6. 
- 
-———. 2002. “My Wife Can’t Break Off Part of Her Belief and Give It to Me: Apocalyptic Interrogations of Christian Individualism Among the Urapmin of Papua New Guinea.” Paideuma 48: 189–206. 
- 
-———. 2004. Becoming Sinners: Christianity and Moral Torment in a Papua New Guinea Society. University of California Press. 
- 
- 
- 
- 
-## A guide to the unit ## 
- 
-{{page>1002guide}} 
1002/8.1.1505639514.txt.gz · Last modified: 2017/09/17 02:11 by Ryan Schram (admin)