Ritual Agency, Substance Transfer and the Making of Supernatural Immediacy in Pilgrim Journeys

Author: Nordin, Andreas

Source: Journal of Cognition and Culture, Volume 9, Number 3, 2009 , pp. 195-223(29)

Publisher: BRILL

Buy & download fulltext article:

OR

Price: $35.00 plus tax (Refund Policy)

Abstract:

Pilgrim journeys are popular religious phenomena that are based on ritual interaction with culturally postulated counterintuitive supernatural agents. This article uses results taken from an anthropological Ph. D. thesis on cognitive aspects of Hindu pilgrimage in Nepal and Tibet. Cognitive theories have been neglected in pilgrimage studies but they offer new perspectives on belief structures and ritual action and call into question some of the current assumptions in this research field. Pilgrim journeys often involve flows of substance of anthropomorphic character. Transferring substance in pilgrimage means leaving material at the pilgrimage site and then receiving other materials to take home. Pilgrim journeys imply ritual interaction, intuitions and ideas regarding the management of sin, impurity and evil. They also imply reception of blessings along with divine agency. This paper investigates how assumptions about agency, psychological essentialism and contagion connected to supernatural agents provides an important selective pressure in formation of beliefs related to pilgrimage. This paper shows that the transfer of substances is an operation on ritual instruments. It creates a supernatural immediacy effect in pilgrims, in the sense suggested by Lawson and McCauley.

Keywords: HINDU PILGRIMAGE; COGNITION; RITUAL AGENCY; SUBSTANCE TRANSFER; ESSENTIALISM; SUPERNATURAL IMMEDIACY

Document Type: Research article

DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/156770909X12489459066228

Affiliations: 1: Department of Social Anthropology, School of Global Studies, University of Gothenburg, Konstepedimins väg 2, P. O. Box 700, SE 405 30 Gothenburg, Sweden;, Email: andreas.nordin@globalstudies.gu.se

Publication date: 2009-10-01

Related content

Tools

Key

Free Content
Free content
New Content
New content
Open Access Content
Open access content
Subscribed Content
Subscribed content
Free Trial Content
Free trial content

Text size:

A | A | A | A
Share this item with others: These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new web pages. print icon Print this page