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1002:10 [2014/10/06 23:35] – [The Secularization Thesis] Ryan Schram (admin)1002:10 [2015/07/15 18:27] (current) – removed Ryan Schram (admin)
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- 
-# Alternate modernities # 
- 
-## Do societies become more secular ## 
- 
-Ryan Schram 
- 
-Mills 169 (A26) 
- 
-ryan.schram@sydney.edu.au 
- 
-8 October 2014 
- 
-## The annual debate over banning burqas ## 
- 
-In the recent public debate about whether women should be allowed to 
-wear a face veil in Parliament House, two prominent politicians 
-offered their views. 
- 
-* Tony Abbott 
- 
-* Julie Bishop 
- 
-What were they? 
- 
-## Why anthro should be a graduation requirement ## 
- 
-Commentators have offered many views on what the veil 'means'. 
- 
-It's a very anthropological sort of question. 
- 
-None of them have apparently read this week's article.  
- 
- 
-## The problem of modernity ## 
- 
-All societies change, but as we have learned in this class, not all 
-societies turn out the same. 
- 
-There is no single road of progress which all societies travel. 
- 
-Globalization is not the conquest of the world by capitalism or 
-Western culture. 
- 
-Put another way: There are multiple modernities. 
- 
-## Why do people talk about modernity ## 
- 
-If there is no one single road of progress, where did this idea of 
-modernity come from? 
- 
-Max Weber's theory of society is key to the development of 
-moderization theory. Weber argued that history is a process of 
-rationalization. Over time, all societies become more complex, and 
-develop greater differentiation in their social organization. 
- 
-Weber says that modernity is the opposite of tradition. 
- 
-## Weber's theory of society ## 
- 
-Weber's theory of society starts with the concept of "social action". 
- 
-Social action is action that is recognized as having a meaning, and 
-means something to the actor. 
- 
-There are four types of social action, each based on a type of meaning 
-they embody. 
- 
-* Traditional: I do it because this is how it has always been. 
-* Affective: I do it because it expresses my emotions. 
-* Value-rational: I do it because this is the best possible way to 
-  advance a collective goal of my society. 
-* Instrumental-rational: I do it because I get the most for the least 
-  amount of effort. 
- 
-## Social action and society ## 
- 
-People are always motivated to act by a combination of all four types 
-of motivation: tradition, affect, value-rationality, and instrumental 
-rationality. 
- 
-One type of motivation is always predominant in a single form.  
- 
-People do different kinds of actions in different kinds of contexts.  
- 
-Social institutions and rules tap into different kinds of motivation. 
- 
-## Examples ## 
- 
-Giving a fruit loaf. 
- 
-Giving change to the Salvos.  
- 
-Buying ramen noodles. 
- 
-Each of these have different kind of primary motivation. Each social 
-role one plays -- relative, donor, customer -- embodies a different 
-value. 
- 
-## Religion as a type of social action ## 
- 
-What kind of value does religion embody? Or, from an actor's point of 
-view, what is the motivation for participating in religious worship 
-and a religious organization? 
- 
-## Religion as a type of social action ## 
- 
-In most senses of the word, people are not motivated to participate in 
-religion for reasons of economic gain, at least not primarily. It 
-isn't **instrumentally rational**, at least not primarily. 
- 
-By the same token, religious institutions are not set up to create a 
-space for people to pursue self-interested goals. 
- 
-Many people find religion emotionally satisfying. But many people find 
-soap operas emotionally satsifying too, so that can't be the only 
-motivation. 
- 
-Tradition, yes, perhaps. 
- 
-## Religion as ethics ## 
- 
-For Weber, some religions draw people because they give them an answer 
-to the ultimate meaning of life, and show them how to be an ethical 
-person. They ask people to do things based on "value 
-rationality". Pursuit of a collective goal is the reason why people 
-pray, worship and participate in a religious community. 
- 
-## Religion is rationalization ## 
- 
-Religion is a force in society because it gives people an alternative 
-to tradition. It forces them to examine why they do what they do. 
- 
-In other words, religion rationalizes people's social behavior. 
- 
-## Religious change leads to social change ## 
- 
-Weber argued that many religious movements sowed the seeds of social 
-revolutions. 
- 
-As society became more rationalized in general, he believed people 
-would not need religion to give them motivation to be rational. They 
-could rely on systems based on instrumental rationality, like 
-bureaucracy and markets. 
- 
-## The Secularization Thesis ## 
- 
-This is called the "secularization thesis"  
- 
-* Religious ethics forces people to reorganize society in ways that separate traditional practices and rules from higher values. 
-* As societies become more rationalized, religious institutions are separated from other domains of society. 
-* Religious identity becomes a private matter. 
-* Overall, people become less involved in religious activities. 
- 
-## Problem: Secularization isn't happening ## 
- 
-For many years, people have observed a return to religion. 
- 
-As more modern forms of society have developed, new religions are 
-developing too. 
- 
-While Europe and Australia are highly secular in some ways, religion 
-is still a defining feature of people and groups. 
- 
-This is not what Weber predicted! 
- 
-## The paradox of religion ## 
- 
-Religion causes people to be rational, and to rationalize their lives 
-and their environment. But this rationality does not lead to 
-secularism or modernity in a classic sense. 
- 
-## Why revival in Java? # 
- 
-Brenner considers several theses: 
- 
-* A 'return' to tradition  
-* Symbolic shelter 
-* Maintain social esteem 
- 
-She ultimately rejects all these as insufficient explanations.  
- 
-## Reform and Islamic modernity ## 
- 
-She ultimately chooses to take seriously the explanation that her own 
-informants gave her. 
- 
-Brenner's informants described religious change as a 'movement', a 
-kind of training, and as self-discipline. 
- 
-In other words, it was a new way of seeing oneself. It is a means to a 
-new subjectivity. 
- 
-## Islamic modernity and Suharto's modernity ## 
- 
-Brenner contrasts the Islamic movement with the nationalism of the New 
-Order and the goverment of Suharto (1960s-1990s). 
- 
-**New Order**: Modernity through consumerism and capitalism. 
- 
-**Islamic movement**: Modernity through creating autonomous individual 
-believers who can choose to follow a pure Islamic ethic. 
- 
-What do these visions of the future have in common? 
- 
-What do they differ on? 
- 
-## Why secularism? ## 
- 
-**World Values Survey 2014, Australia, "How important is religion to 
-you?"**: 
- 
-* 'Important' 31.1 % 
- 
-* 'Not very important' or 'not at all important' 65.3% 
- 
-* Compared to around 60% in Scandinavian countries and 30% in the US. 
- 
-Do these figures surprise you? Why is religion so unimportant to a 
-majority of Australians, and for that matter, many European countries 
-too, but not the US? 
- 
-## Stay tuned ## 
- 
-Ryan will be back for Week 13.  
- 
-## Reference ## 
- 
-World Values Survey. 2014. "World Values Survey Wave 6: 2010-2014: 
-Online Data Analysis: V.9 Important in Life, Religion." World Values 
-Survey Database. Accessed June 
-30, 2014. http://worldvaluessurvey.org/. 
  
1002/10.1412663719.txt.gz · Last modified: 2014/10/06 23:35 by Ryan Schram (admin)