Rituals
•A ritual is a set of symbolic behaviors
designed to have a particular effect.
•Rituals are typically both stylized and
repetitive.
Rituals
•Rituals are commonly associated with
religion, but are just as often found in
the secular world. There are many
political and social rituals.
Rites of Passage
•Rites of Passage are rituals that mark
changes in status throughout one’s life.
•Arnold van Gennep first used this term
to describe these rituals in his book
“The Rites of Passage.”
Rites of Passage
•Birth Ceremonies
•Entrance into Religious/Social
Communities
•Graduations
•Reaching Adulthood/Coming of Age
•Weddings
•Funerals
Rites of Passage: 1
st
Stage
•Separation: the ending of one social
status. The individual may be physically
and/or socially removed from their
normal everyday life.
Rites of Passage: 2
nd
Stage
•Transition or Liminality: a stage
between one status and another: where
one is neither one thing nor another.
Rites of Passage: 2
nd
Stage
•Victor Turner described liminality as
being characterized by communitas.
•When rites of passage are undergone
by groups, there is a de-emphasis on
social differences (race, class…etc.)
Often typical social rules don’t apply.
This is communitas.
Rites of Passage: 3
rd
Stage
•Re-incorporation: the person is
reintroduced to society with a new
social status. Regular rules of behavior
are once again followed.
Rites of Passage: 3
rd
Stage
•Re-incorporation: the person is
reintroduced to society with a new
social status. Regular rules of behavior
are once again followed.