From Ritual Practice to Cultural Text

This article takes up the distinction between the textual and social practices (that is, actions taken in the social world). In the same way that different literary genres are themselves subject to different interpretative operations, ritual practice and the reading of texts are not strictly analogo...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: James Epstein
Format: Article
Language:Spanish
Published: Universidad de Navarra 2000-11-01
Series:Memoria y Civilización
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.unav.edu/publicaciones/revistas/index.php/myc/article/view/33871
Description
Summary:This article takes up the distinction between the textual and social practices (that is, actions taken in the social world). In the same way that different literary genres are themselves subject to different interpretative operations, ritual practice and the reading of texts are not strictly analogous. Here Clifford Geertz's famous rendering of the so-called "text analogy" in the social sciences can be misleading. If we believe that it is important to recover historical meanings expressed in ritual form, then we must be careful to differentiate between how social practices work from how texts work. This article considers ritual practices, including those of sociability, in British radical politics in the age of the French revolution, as well as considering rationalist hostility to ritual performance and the privileging of the printed text over ritual and spectacle.
ISSN:1139-0107
2254-6367