Esposito chapter two “Indigenous Religions”

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Lecture Outline Chapter 2

 

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Independent

Ethnic

Land-bounded

 

Individuals negotiate their identity in both modern countries and native groups

Help to understand early religions

 

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Religion’s origins

100,000 years ago

Artifacts from hunter–gatherer societies

Stories

Axis mundi

Shamanism

Central to understanding origins of religion

View of time as circular

Physiology, biology, and intelligence same in humans now as 30,000 years ago

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Homo religiosus

Religion always been at center of human culture

Past 100,000 years, increasing mastery of tools and development of language

Highly bonded groups of 50

Division of labor

Indigenous peoples rational and highly skilled

By 30,000 BCE humans performing ceremonial burials, indicating belief in afterlife

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Indigenous religious traditions

Group part of everlasting cycle of nature

Group eternal; part of the never-ending group; “collective” identity (not individual identity)

Soul belief

Spiritual bond with each other, animals, plants, the dead

Religion expressed in an embodied engagement with world

World’s ecosystem alive and fertile; part of larger, ordered cosmos

Religion sung, danced, fasted, and tranced by collective group experience

Spirit beings ultimate reality

Ancestors still connected with the living

Dreams and visions represent reality

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Believed that a nonmaterial component lived on after body perished

Function of burial to open a gateway to afterlife

Group symbol, or totem, used for identity, to maintain solidarity in group, to regulate relations with outsiders

Émile Durkheim—“sacred totem”

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Around 30,000 BCE humans acquired capacity to think symbolically; start asking “What if?” questions

Venus figurines related to concerns about birth and survival of children

Female power behind mystery of conception and birth and the miracle of breastfeeding was revered

After 15,000 BCE dead buried in mounds or graves in fetal position, suggesting earth a womb from which resurrection was expected

 

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Shamanism

Roles far back as 30,000 years ago included healing, dealing with death, traveling to realm of dead

Binds community together in face of crisis

Brings harmony to group when discord

Uses altered state of consciousness or trance to communicate with unseen spirits, gain insight into a situation, intervene on behalf of afflicted party

 

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Spirits coexist with humans in a layered cosmos

Role universally regarded as mortally dangerous

Train through long apprenticeships

Universal reliance on drumming, dancing, chanting, and fasting to induce trance

Still pivotal figures in societies around world

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Indigenous religions today

Expansion of the West into indigenous cultures

Brought disease, plundering, enslavement

Destroyed and changed ancient religious traditions

No indigenous groups remain today that have not been exposed to outsiders

Some groups successful in assimilating, then integrating modern with indigenous

 

 

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Today (continued)

Pan-Americanization of indigenous peoples

Native American Church major example

Similar churches in South America

Shamanism

Remains important in many parts of world, especially Asia

White shamans

 

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