Difference between revisions of "Rite of passage" - New World Encyclopedia

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[[File:Michael's Bar Mitzvah 3.jpg|thumb|400px|[[Jewish]] boy reading a [[Torah]] scroll at his [[Bar Mitzvah]]]]
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A '''rite of passage''' is a [[ritual]] that marks a change in a person's [[social status|social]] or sexual status. Rites of passage are often [[ceremony|ceremonies]] surrounding events such as [[childbirth]], [[puberty]], [[coming of age]], [[marriage]]s, or [[death]]. The term was popularized by German [[ethnography|ethnographer]] [[Arnold van Gennep]] (1873-1957) in the early part of the twentieth century. Rites of passage are diverse, celebrated in a wide variety of ways throughout the world. There continue to be many diverse examples of rites of passages in contemporary society.
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Despite their diversity, rites of passage all serve the same purpose: To separate the individual from their former group, prepare them for their new phase of life, and their re-entry into society at this new level or position. The process not only prepares the individual for a new role or phase in their life, but also may serve to bind them with others who are going through the same process. Researchers noted that this "liminal" phase, in which individuals are neither in their former group or position nor yet re-introduced into society, is very significant. During this time, each individual prepares him or herself for the future, and the responsibilities that will come, yet during that time they are not constrained. Thus, barriers that might normally exist between people of different [[social status]], for example, dissolve and each person is regarded as simply another person in the same liminal state. Such an experience can have a powerful impact, laying the foundation for deep relationships in the future. In order to establish a world of peace and harmony, all people may need to go through a "rite of passage" and experience this liminal state wherein all are equal in value.
  
[[Image:Shan boy undergoing Poy Sang Long initiation rite .jpg|thumb|200px|Shan boy undergoing [[Poy Sang Long]] initiation]]
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==Stages==
A '''rite of passage''' is a [[ritual]] that marks a change in a person's [[social status|social]] or sexual status. Rites of passage are often [[ceremony|ceremonies]] surrounding events such as [[childbirth]], [[menarche]] or other milestones within [[puberty]], [[coming of age]], [[wedding]]s, [[menopause]], and [[death]].
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According to [[Arnold van Gennep]], '''rites of passage''' have three phases: Separation, [[liminality]], and incorporation. In the first phase, people withdraw from the group and begin moving from one place or status to another. In the third phase, they reenter [[society]], having completed the rite. The liminal phase is the period between states, during which people have left one place or state but have not yet entered or joined the next. During the liminal state one's sense of [[identity]] dissolves to some extent, as it is a period of transition.
  
==History of term==
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[[Victor Turner]] and [[Mary Douglas]] developed further theories on rites of passage in the 1960s. Turner coined the term ''liminoid'' to refer to experiences that have characteristics of liminal experiences but are individualized and do not involve a resolution of a personal crisis. A graduation ceremony might be regarded as liminal while a rock concert might be understood to be liminoid. The liminal is part of society, a social or religious ritual, while the liminoid is a break from society. Turner stated that liminal experiences are rare and diminished in industrial societies, and are replaced by liminoid experiences.
The term was popularised by the German [[ethnographer]] [[Arnold van Gennep]] (1873-1957), in the early part of the [[twentieth century]]. Further theories were developed in the 1960s by [[Mary Douglas]] and [[Victor Turner]]. [[Joseph Campbell]]'s  1949 text, ''[[The Hero with a Thousand Faces]]'' and his theory of the journey of the hero were also influenced by  van Gennep.
 
 
 
According to van Gennep, rites of passage have three phases: separation, [[liminality]], and incorporation. In the first phase, people withdraw from the group and begin moving from one place or status to another. In the third phase, they reenter society, having completed the rite. The liminal phase is the period between states, during which people have left one place or state but haven't yet entered or joined the next. It is a state of [[limbo]].
 
  
 
==Types and examples==
 
==Types and examples==
Rites of passage are diverse, and are often not recognized as such in the culture in which they occur. According to Van Gennep a rite of passage would fulfill the tripartite structure he laid out. Many society rituals may look like rites of passage but miss some of the important structural and functional components. Typically the missing piece is the societal recognition and reincorporation phase. Adventure Education programs, such as Outward Bound, have often been described as potential rites of passage. Pamela Cushing researched the rites of passage impact upon adolescent youth at the Canadian Outward Bound School and found the rite of passage impact was lessened by the missing reincorporation phase (Cushing, 1998).  Bell (2003) presented more evidence of this lacking third stage and described the "Contemporary Adventure Model of a Rites of Passage" as a modern and weaker version of the rites of passage typically used by outdoor adventure programs.  Given these challenges, many examples of rites of passages are possible in contemporary society.
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There are many situations in which rites of passage are observed. Following are some of the most universally recognized.
  
Some examples are given in the following subsections.  
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===Life cycle===
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The events in an individual's life cycle, particularly those surrounding [[birth]], [[marriage]], and [[death]] are acknowledged in almost all [[culture]]s to be important rites of passage. However, the way in which these events are celebrated varies considerably across countries and regions and within different religious and [[ethnic group]]s. The [[custom]]s and [[tradition]]s surrounding these events can be elaborate and complex. For example, traditional [[Hindu]] [[funeral]] ceremonies usually last thirteen days, while [[Indonesia]]n weddings are often attended by more than a thousand guests.  
  
===Coming of age rites===
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====Birth====
[[Image:Sepik River initiations 1975, 6.JPG|right|thumb|250px|[[Sepik River]], PNG. Tribal male initiation through excruciating scarification]]
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In Western cultures [[pregnancy]] is often celebrated with a [[baby shower]]. In the [[Jewish]] tradition a baby boy undergoes [[brit milah]], a religious [[circumcision]], while [[Muslim]]s and [[Hindu]]s shave the baby's head on the seventh day.  
*[[Adolescent]] [[circumcision]]
 
*[[Debutante ball]]
 
*[[Dokimasia]]
 
*[[First haircut]]
 
*''[[Gembuku]]'' among the [[samurai]]
 
*[[Graduation]]
 
*[[Poy Sang Long]]
 
*[[Prom]]
 
*[[Quinceañera]]
 
*[http://www2.hsp.org/exhibits/Balch%20exhibits/rites/apache.html/ American Indian Woman]
 
*''[[Russ]]'' in [[Norway]]
 
*[[Schoolies week]] in [[Australia]]
 
*[[Scarification]] and various other physical endurances
 
*Starting to wear [[nail polish]], [[lipstick]] or other [[make-up]]
 
  
In various tribal societies, entry into an [[age grade]] – generally gender-separated – (unlike an [[age set]]) is marked by an initiation rite, which may be the crowning of a long and complex preparation, sometimes in retreat.
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====Marriage====
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Brides to be in Western countries often receive [[engagement]] rings and hold bachelor and bachelorette parties. Traditional American and European brides wear white on their wedding days, a custom which has been adopted by cultures throughout the world, while red is worn by Muslim, Chinese, Indian, Pakistani, and Armenian brides.  
  
===Coming of age in U.S. folklore in the late 20th century===
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====Death====
The following would be a typical example of the "coming of age" lifetime moments as presented by a largely white, heteronormative, middle class culture in the United States. While many people around the world and in the U.S. will experience the events described, the construction of the monolithic idea of these events as chronological and particularly transformative is deeply rooted in the specific religious/political/social/sexual/economic project of national identity in the United States. These are often mistakenly presented as universal across culture, class and context and are mythologized in various national and international media: literature, magazines, film, television, popular music.
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[[Sikh]] women generally wear white clothes for [[mourning]], although sometimes they wear black. Though there are variations within the Hindu traditions, women generally wear white or black. For example, Jewish mourners returning home from a funeral are normally given a hard boiled egg as a symbol of life. The process of mourning is also conducted according to different traditions, sometimes taking a considerable time period.
  
* Birth
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===Coming of age===
* First steps
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[[File:Sepik River initiation - crocodile scarification 1975, 2.JPG|right|thumb|300px|[[Sepik River]] male [[initiation]] through scarification]]
* First words spoken
 
* First day of [[school]]/[[kindergarten]]
 
* First learned to ride a [[bicycle]]
 
* First cigarette
 
* First girlfriend/boyfriend
 
** First kiss
 
** First time your heart was broken
 
* First obtained driver's license
 
* First job
 
* Senior [[prom]]/high school [[graduation]]
 
* Losing one's [[virginity]]
 
* Voting
 
* First experience of another's death
 
* First day of [[college]]/first day in dorm (on your own)
 
* First age to purchase and/or drink [[alcohol]]
 
* College graduation
 
* First time living on own/purchase own apartment or house
 
* [[Marriage]]
 
* First child
 
* Job promotion
 
* Retirement
 
* Last words
 
* Death
 
  
[[Image:20050921circoncisionB.jpg|right|thumb|200px|[[Christ]] underwent the Jewish circumcision, here depicted on a Catholic cathedral; a liturgical feast commemorates this on New Year's Day]]
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Coming of age rituals, which occur in different forms in most cultures, are some of the most recognized rites of passage. For example, [[debutante ball]]s, which are traditionally held in upper class Western society, and [[quinceañeras]], which take place in Hispanic communities, mark a girl's introduction into womanhood. Birthday celebrations often serve as rites of passage, such as "sweet sixteen" parties in the United States. The [[Poy Sang Long]] is a ceremony undergone by boys in [[Burma]] and [[Thailand]] where they become novice monks and temporarily live the [[monasticism|monastic]] lifestyle. In some cultures, coming of age rituals can involve [[scarification]] and various other physical endurances.
  
===Religious initiation rites===
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In 1928, the American [[cultural anthropology|cultural anthropologist]] [[Margaret Mead]] published her controversial findings in ''Coming of Age in Samoa''. Her study was conducted in a village of six hundred people on the island of Tau, [[Samoa]]. Mead lived with, observed, and interviewed young women, concluding that [[adolescence]] in Samoa was a not marked by the emotional or psychological distress, anxiety, or confusion often seen in the United States.
* [[Baptism]]
 
* First [[Eucharist]] and First [[Confession]] (especially [[First Communion]] in [[Catholicism]])
 
* [[Confirmation (sacrament)|Confirmation]]
 
* [[Bar Mitzvah]] and [[Bat Mitzvah]]
 
* [[Circumcision]], mainly in Judaism (Bris) and Islam
 
* [[Upanayanam]] amongst some [[Hindu]] [[caste|castes]].
 
* [[Shinbyu]] in [[Theravada Buddhism]]
 
* ''[[Rumspringa]]'' among the [[Amish]]
 
* ''[[Vision quest]]'' in some Native American cultures
 
  
===Other initiation rites===
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Despite its prevalence in the media, not all cultures undergo adolescence as experienced in America and other Western cultures. The rites of passage which people in the United States typically experience follow a chronological, youth-oriented line. It begins with birth and a child's first steps and first words spoken, and includes childhood events such as learning to ride a bike. Adolescent coming of age would not be complete without the first kiss and first relationship, first car, and first job.  
* [[Conscription]], "making boys into men" (i.e. warriors) through military service is rather a life phase than a mere rite
 
* [[Walkabout]]
 
* [[Freemasonry#Ritual and Symbols|Freemasonry rituals]]
 
* [[Batizados]] in [[Capoeira]].
 
  
===Armed forces rites===
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[[Marriage]] and children are important rites of passage in the United States, as well as in most other cultures. There are few important recognized rituals in later adulthood in the United States except retirement. While many people around the world and in the U.S. will experience them, the construction of the idea of these events as particularly transformative is deeply rooted in the specific national identity in the United States. These are often mistakenly presented as universal across culture, class, and context, and are mythologized in various national and international media.
* [[U.S. Marine Crucible]]
 
* [[U.S. Navy: Battle Stations]]
 
* Naval (military and civilian) [[crossing the equator]]
 
* In the [[U.S. Navy]], [[wetting-down]] is a ceremony in which a Naval officer is ceremonially thrown into the ocean upon receiving a promotion.
 
* [[U.S. Army Victory Forge]]
 
* In many military organizations, as in civilian groups, new conscripts are sometimes subjected by "veterans" to practical jokes, ranging from taking advantage of their naïveté to public humiliation and physical attacks; see [[Hazing]].
 
* Soldiers and sailors may also be [[hazing|hazed]] again on obtaining a promotion.
 
  
===Academic Groups===
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===Education===
Academic circles such as dorms, fraternities, teams and other clubs practice 
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Many rites of passage center around a child's [[education]]. The first day of [[school]] is an especially important rite of passage in Western culture. In various tribal societies, entry into an age grade—generally [[gender]]-separated—is marked by an [[initiation]] rite, which may be the crowning of a long and complex preparation. Graduation is acknowledged in most cultures as a rite of passage. It is celebrated differently in different areas of the world. For example, in [[Scandinavia]] students celebrate [[russ]] festivities throughout the month when they graduate high school. In the U.S., Britain, and Canada, the [[prom]] is another important rite of passage associated with [[high school]] graduation. In Spanish universities, a student who has completed his studies is sometimes submitted to a public questioning by the faculty. If the student passes he invites professors and mates to a party. If not, he is publicly processioned with [[donkey ears]].
*[[hazing]]
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[[Image:20050921circoncisionB.jpg|right|thumb|300px|[[Christ]] underwent the Jewish circumcision, here depicted on a Catholic cathedral; a liturgical feast commemorates this on New Year's Day]]
*[[ragging]]
 
*[[fagging]]
 
  
Entrance into Medicine and Pharmacy (University) :
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===Religion===
* [[White Coat Ceremony]]
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Many rites of passage around the world center on [[religion]]. There are the processes of [[baptism]] and [[confirmation]] in [[Christian]] cultures, and the first [[confession]] in the [[Catholic]] tradition.  
* In Spanish universities of the [[Modern Age]], like [[Universidad Complutense]] in [[Alcalá de Henares]], upon completion of his studies, the student was submitted to a public questioning by the faculty, who could ask sympathetic questions that let him excel or tricky points. If the student passed he invited professors and mates to a party. If not, he was publicly processioned with [[donkey ears]].
 
  
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[[Jewish]] teenagers celebrate their [[bar mitzvah]] or [[bat mitzvah]], while younger children in certain [[Hindu]] [[caste|castes]] celebrate the [[sacred thread ceremony]] to mark the beginning of their education. In [[Amish]] communities, adolescents will sometimes spend an experimental period living outside the community before deciding whether to return to the church and be baptized as an adult. This rite of passage is known as [[Rumspringa]]. The ritual of ''[[Vision quest]]'' is undergone in some [[Native American]] cultures by [[shaman]] [[apprentice]]s. These youths are often required to undergo sensory deprivation in order to help them make contact with the [[spirit]]s.
  
==Liminality==
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===Miscellaneous===
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Other [[initiation]] rites include the [[Walkabout]], a process that is believed to be practiced by the [[Australian Aborigine]]s in which youths spend a period of time alone in the wilderness. Another ceremony of initiation is the [[Batizados]] celebration, in which new members are baptized into [[Capoeira]] groups, a [[Brazil]]ian form of [[martial art]]s. There are specific rites of passage for the various branches of the Armed forces. For example, in the [[U.S. Navy]], [[wetting-down]] is a ceremony in which a Naval officer is ceremonially thrown into the [[ocean]] upon receiving a promotion. In many military organizations, as in academic groups such as dorms, [[fraternity|fraternities]], teams, and other clubs, new recruits are sometimes subjected to [[hazing]].
  
 
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==Nature and significance==
'''Liminality''' (from the Latin word ''līmen'', meaning "a threshold") is the quality of the second stage of a [[ritual]] in the theories of [[Arnold van Gennep]], [[Victor Turner]], and others. In these theories, a ritual, especially a [[rite of passage]], involves some change to the participants, especially their [[social status]].
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The example of a college graduation ceremony demonstrates the three stages of a rite of passage.  
 
 
The liminal state is characterized by ambiguity, openness, and indeterminacy. One's sense of [[identity (social science)|identity]] dissolves to some extent, bringing about disorientation. Liminality is a period of transition, during which your normal limits to thought, self-understanding, and behavior are relaxed, opening the way to something new.
 
 
 
People, places, or things may not complete a transition, or a transition between two states may not be fully possible.  Those who remain in a state between two other states may become permanently liminal.
 
 
 
==Three stages==
 
With examples from a college graduation ceremony.  
 
  
 
*''First or preliminary stage''
 
*''First or preliminary stage''
Line 122: Line 60:
 
*''The Liminal stage''
 
*''The Liminal stage''
  
A period during which one is "[[Betwixt and Between|betwixt and between]]," "neither here nor there." When the ceremony is in progress, the participants are no longer students but neither are they yet graduates. This is the distinctive character of liminality.
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A period during which one is "neither here nor there." When the ceremony is in progress, the participants are no longer students but neither are they yet graduates. This is the distinctive character of liminality.
  
 
*''The final or postliminal stage''
 
*''The final or postliminal stage''
  
A period during which one's new social status is confirmed, and reincorporation. Upon receiving his or her diploma, the student officially becomes a college graduate. The dean and professors shake the student's hand in congratulation, giving public recognition to the student's new status as a person with a college degree.
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A period during which one's new social status is confirmed and reincorporated. Upon receiving his or her diploma, the student officially becomes a college graduate. The dean and professors shake the student's hand in congratulation, giving public recognition to the student's new status as a person with a college degree.
 
 
== ''Communitas'' ==
 
 
 
During the liminal stage, normally accepted differences between the participants, such as [[social class]], are often de-emphasized or ignored. A social structure of ''[[communitas]]'' forms: one based on common humanity and equality rather than recognized hierarchy. For example, during a [[pilgrimage]], members of an upper class and members of a lower class might mix and talk as equals, when in normal life they would likely never talk at all or their conversation might be limited to giving orders.
 
 
 
== Structure? ==
 
 
 
[[Anthropologists]] are currently in debate over whether the liminal stage of rituals has an absence of structure (anti-structure) or "hyper-structure," or whether both are possible. In anthropology, liminality can also represent an experience that places one in unfamiliar surrounds, not so much ambiguous as new (ambiguity is different from new in the aspect that a situation, or commonly, a plight, can make the definition of "ambiguous"/"ambiguity" have a multiply finite definition, albeit the unknown, the obscure, or the remotely familiar. Familiar in the sense that you visit a new neighborhood but not a new country).
 
 
 
== Examples ==
 
===Liminality in rituals===
 
  
In the simple example of a college [[graduation]] ceremony, the liminal phase can actually be extended to include the period of time between when the last assignment was finished (and graduation was assured) all the way through reception of the diploma. That [[no man's land]] represents the limbo associated with liminality. The stress of accomplishing tasks for college has been lifted. Yet, the individual has not transitioned to a new stage in life (psychologically or physically). The result is a unique perspective on what has come before, and what may come next.
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===Liminality===
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During the liminal stage, normally accepted differences between the participants, such as [[social class]], are often de-emphasized or ignored. A social structure of ''[[communitas]]'' forms: One based on common humanity and equality rather than recognized hierarchy. For example, during a [[pilgrimage]], members of an upper class and members of a lower class might mix and talk as equals, when in normal life they would likely never talk at all or their conversation might be limited to giving orders.
  
It can include the period between when a couple get engaged and their marriage or between death and burial, for which cultures may or may not have set ritual observances. Even very sexually liberated cultures would make it extraordinarily taboo of an engaged spouse to have sex with another person during this time, versus the milder taboo of cheating on a lover.
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In the example of a college [[graduation]] ceremony, the liminal phase can actually be extended to include the period of time between when the last assignment was finished all the way through reception of the diploma. The individual has not transitioned to a new stage in life psychologically or physically, and the result is a unique perspective on what has come before, and what may come next.
  
When Western cultures use [[mistletoe]], the plant is placed in a threshold (the "limen"), at the time of the winter solstice. The act that occurs under the mistletoe (the kiss) breaks the boundaries between two people. Because what happens under the mistletoe is occurring in ritual time/space, the people kissing are not breaking taboos imposed under normal circumstances by their marriages to (or relationships with) other people.
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The time between when a couple become [[betrothal|engaged]] and their [[marriage]], between [[conception]] and [[birth]] or between [[death]] and [[burial]] are liminal periods. When Western cultures use [[mistletoe]], the plant is placed in a threshold at the time of the winter [[solstice]]. The kiss that occurs under the mistletoe breaks the boundaries between two people. Because what happens under the mistletoe is occurring in ritual time/space, the people kissing are not breaking [[taboo]]s imposed under normal circumstances by their marriages to (or relationships with) other people.
  
===Liminality in time===
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==References==
 
 
[[Twilight]] serves as a liminal time, between day and night.  The name of the television fiction series ''[[The Twilight Zone]]'' makes reference to this, describing it as "the middle ground between light and shadow, between science and superstition" in one variant of the original series' opening. The name is from an actual zone observable from space in the place where daylight or shadow advances or retreats about the Earth.  [[Noon]] and, more often, [[midnight]] can be considered liminal, the first transitioning between morning and afternoon, the latter between days. 
 
 
 
Within the years, liminal times include [[equinox]]es when day and night have equal length, and [[solstice]]s, when the increase of day or night shifts over to its decrease.  Where the [[Quarter days]] are held to mark the change in seasons, they also are liminal times. 
 
 
 
[[New Year's Day]], whatever its connection or lack of one to the astronomical sky, is a liminal time.  Customs such as fortune-telling take advantage of this liminal state.  In a number of cultures, actions and events on the first day of the year can determine the year, leading to such beliefs as [[First-Foot]].  Many cultures regard it as a time especially prone to hauntings by [[ghost]]s — [[liminal being]]s, neither alive nor dead.
 
 
 
Liminality can refer to the time between [[conception]] and birth in western cultures;{{Fact|date=March 2007}} some Eastern cultures counting su b beginning of existence as the moment of conception.{{Fact|date=March 2007}}
 
 
 
===Liminality in states of consciousness===
 
 
 
Another example of liminality can occur when someone has just awoken from a dream and in a [[hypnagogic]] state of mind is unable to distinguish whether or not their dream really occurred.
 
 
 
===Liminality of beings===
 
 
 
In reality [[illegal immigrant]]s (present but not "official"), [[Stateless person|stateless people]], [[intersexual]] or [[transgender]] people, [[bisexual]] people in most contemporary societies, and those of mixed [[ethnicity]] or accused but not yet judged guilty or not guilty, are liminal. Teenagers, being neither children nor adults, are liminal people. The [[trickster]] and related [[archetype]]s embody many such contradictions as do many [[popular culture]] [[celebrities]]. The category could also hypothetically and in [[fiction]] include [[cyborg]]s, [[hybrid]]s between two species, [[shapeshifter]]s. One could also consider seals, crabs, shorebirds, frogs, bats, dolphins/whales and other "border animals" to be liminal. It should come as no surprise that these liminal creatures figure prominently in mythology as shapeshifters and spirit guides.
 
 
 
Wounds are liminal in that a wound is in constant flux, either getting better or getting worse. It is a site of healing or infection (or both, simultaneously). Menstruation is a condition in which (like a wound) the boundary between the inside of the body and the outside of the body is broken. Sex is a liminal act.
 
 
 
On an even more cosmic level, we have those judged both living and non-living, such as the human [[fetus]] in the [[abortion debate]], those in a [[Persistent Vegetative State]], [[undead]] characters and [[Schrödinger's cat]]. Plants such as seaweed (between sea and land) and mistletoe (between earth and sky) are not only liminal themselves, but are used in liminal rituals such as healing.
 
 
 
===Liminality in places===
 
 
 
These can range from [[border]]s, to no man's lands and [[disputed territories]], to [[crossroads (culture)|crossroads]] to perhaps [[airport]]s or [[hotel]]s, which people pass through but do not live in. In [[mythology]] and [[religion]] or [[occult|esoteric lore]] this can include such realms as [[Purgatory]] or [[Da'at (Kabbalah)|Da'at]] which as well as signifying liminality some theologians have denied actually existing, making them, in some cases, doubly liminal. "Between-ness" defines these spaces. For a hotel worker (an insider) or a person passing by with disinterest (a total outsider), the hotel would have a very different connotation. To a traveller staying there, the hotel would function as a liminal zone.
 
 
 
Examples in fiction include the [[Interzone (book)|Interzone]], the [[Wood between the Worlds]] and, as mentioned, ''[[The Twilight Zone]]''. In the series itself, fittingly, the Twilight Zone does not appear as an actual literal location, making it both a place and not a place at the same time, and therefore also doubly liminal.
 
 
 
Doors, windows, springs, caves, shores, rivers, volcanic calderas, fords, passes, crossroads, bridges, and marshes are all liminal. Oedipus (an adoptee and therefore liminal) met his father at the crossroads and killed him; the bluesman Robert Johnson met the devil at the crossroads, where he is said to have sold his soul. Major transformations occur at crossroads and other liminal places, at least partly because liminality — being so unstable — can pave the way for access to esoteric knowledge or understanding of both sides. Liminality is sacred, alluring, and dangerous.
 
 
 
===Liminality in folklore===
 
There are a number of stories in [[folklore]] of those what could only be killed in a liminal space: [[Lleu Llaw Gyffes|Lleu]],  could not be killed during the day or night, nor indoors or outdoors, neither riding nor walking, not clothed and not naked (and is attacked at dusk, whilst wrapped in a net with one foot on a cauldron and one on a goat). Likewise, in the [[Mahabharata]], [[Indra]] promises to not slay [[Namuci]] and [[Vritra]] with anything wet nor dry, in the day nor in the night, but kills them at dusk with foam. [http://www.bookrags.com/Vritra]
 
 
 
==Liminoid==
 
Turner coined the term ''liminoid'' to refer to experiences that have characteristics of liminal experiences but are optional and don't involve a resolution of a personal crisis. A graduation ceremony might be regarded as liminal while a rock concert might be understood to be liminoid. The liminal is part of society, an aspect of social or religious ritual, while the liminoid is a break from society, part of play. Turner stated that liminal experiences are rare and diminished in industrial societies, and are replaced by liminoid experiences.
 
 
 
== Related ==
 
''[[.hack//Liminality]]'' is the title of the four episode [[OVA]] from the ''[[.hack]]'' PS2 game series. One segment was included with each of the four games. Liminality in the series is defined as "The nature of boundaries," a definition used in the animation between the characters talking about the fictional popular online game 'The World' and the trouble that arises. They describe the nature of boundaries (liminality) as barriers of laws, physics, and omnipresent beings that prevent them from accomplishing their goal to save it.
 
 
 
Liminal Performance Group[http://www.liminalgroup.org]:  A Collaborative group of artist that produces work that is on the limen(s) of Dance, Theater, and Visual Art. 
 
 
 
The Wake Student Magazine [http://www.wakemag.org], a weekly magazine at the University of Minnesota, publishes a literary journal called "Liminal" [http://www.wakemag.org/liminal]. The journal was created in 2005 and serves the University of Minnesota's creative community by publishing and sharing poetry, prose, and art. The journal strives to present a variety of works.
 
 
 
===References===
 
 
 
*Bell, B. J. (2003). "The rites of passage and outdoor education: Critical concerns for effective programming." ''The Journal of Experiential Education'', 26, 1, pp. 41-50.
 
*Cushing, P.J. (1998). "Competing the cycle of transformation: Lessons from the rites of passage model." P''athways: The Ontario Journal of Experiential Education'', 9,5,7-12.
 
*Turner, Victor. 1967. “Betwixt and Between: The Liminal Period in Rites de Passage,” in The Forest of Symbols. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, p. 93-111
 
  
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*Christopher, Nancy G., Louise C. Mahdi., and Michael Meade. 1996. ''Crossroads: The Quest for Contemporary Rites of Passage''. Open Court Publishing Company. ISBN 978-0812691900
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*Cushing, P.J. 1998. "Competing the cycle of transformation: Lessons from the rites of passage model." In ''Pathways: The Ontario Journal of Experiential Education''. 9,5,7-12.
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*Frazer, James G. and George W. Stocking. [1890] 1998. ''The Golden Bough: Abridged Edition''. Penguin Classics. ISBN 0140189319
 +
*Mahdi, Louise C. 1987. ''Betwixt and Between: Patterns of Masculine and Feminine Initiation''. Open Court Publishing Company. ISBN 978-0812690484
 +
*Mead, Margaret. [1928] 2001. ''Coming of Age in Samoa: A Psychological Study of Primitive Youth for Western Civilisation''. Harper Perennial Modern Classics. ISBN 0688050336
 +
*Mead, Margaret. [1930] 2001. ''Growing Up in New Guinea: A Comparative Study of Primitive Education''. Harper Perennial Modern Classics. ISBN 0688178111
 +
*Turner, Victor. 1970. ''The Forest of Symbols: Aspects of Ndembu Ritual''. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press. ISBN 0801491010
 +
*Van Gennep, Arnold. [1909] 2004. ''The Rites of Passage''. Routledge. ISBN 0415330238
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
* [http://www.boyhoodstudies.com/encyclopaideia.htm Encyclopaideia] A list of male rites of passage
+
All links retrieved December 14, 2022.
* [http://www.boyhoodstudies.com/puellarium.htm Puellarium] A list of female rites of passage
 
* [http://www.kcet.org/explore-ca/california-stories/ritesofpassage/ Rites of Passage] (kcet.org)
 
 
 
''Ethnographic examples:''
 
* [http://hrsbstaff.ednet.ns.ca/waymac/Sociology/A%20Term%201/2.%20Culture/Rituals.htm A list of rites of passage and similar rituals] Various ethnographic examples
 
* [http://www.pygmies.info/initiation.html Rites of passage of Baka Pygmies] Pygmies initiation, with haircut and other rituals
 
 
 
''Religious examples:''
 
*[http://merrymeettemple.org/wrop.html Rites of Passage]A brief explanation of the Wiccan Rites of Passage.
 
 
 
 
 
  
 +
*[https://akomaunitycenter.org/what-are-rites-of-passage-and-why-are-they-so-important/ What Are Rites of Passage and Why Are They So Important?] ''Akoma Unity Center''.
 +
*[https://www.openskywilderness.com/rite-of-passage/ Rite of Passage] ''Open Sky Wilderness Therapy''.
 +
*[https://www.riteofpassagejourneys.org/ Rite of Passage Journeys]
 +
*[https://www.globalcitizen.org/en/content/13-amazing-coming-of-age-traditions-from-around-th/ 13 Amazing Coming of Age Traditions From Around the World] ''Global Citizen''
 +
*[https://theaseanpost.com/article/luxurious-perilous-here-are-some-most-fascinating-rites-passage-around-world From Luxurious to Perilous, Here Are Some of the Most Fascinating Rites Of Passage from Around the World!] ''The Asean Post''.
 +
*[https://simplicable.com/en/rites-of-passage 6 Examples of a Rite of Passage] ''Simplicable''.
  
 
{{Credits|Rite_of_passage|137851237|Liminality|132706844|}}
 
{{Credits|Rite_of_passage|137851237|Liminality|132706844|}}

Latest revision as of 01:43, 15 December 2022


Jewish boy reading a Torah scroll at his Bar Mitzvah

A rite of passage is a ritual that marks a change in a person's social or sexual status. Rites of passage are often ceremonies surrounding events such as childbirth, puberty, coming of age, marriages, or death. The term was popularized by German ethnographer Arnold van Gennep (1873-1957) in the early part of the twentieth century. Rites of passage are diverse, celebrated in a wide variety of ways throughout the world. There continue to be many diverse examples of rites of passages in contemporary society.

Despite their diversity, rites of passage all serve the same purpose: To separate the individual from their former group, prepare them for their new phase of life, and their re-entry into society at this new level or position. The process not only prepares the individual for a new role or phase in their life, but also may serve to bind them with others who are going through the same process. Researchers noted that this "liminal" phase, in which individuals are neither in their former group or position nor yet re-introduced into society, is very significant. During this time, each individual prepares him or herself for the future, and the responsibilities that will come, yet during that time they are not constrained. Thus, barriers that might normally exist between people of different social status, for example, dissolve and each person is regarded as simply another person in the same liminal state. Such an experience can have a powerful impact, laying the foundation for deep relationships in the future. In order to establish a world of peace and harmony, all people may need to go through a "rite of passage" and experience this liminal state wherein all are equal in value.

Stages

According to Arnold van Gennep, rites of passage have three phases: Separation, liminality, and incorporation. In the first phase, people withdraw from the group and begin moving from one place or status to another. In the third phase, they reenter society, having completed the rite. The liminal phase is the period between states, during which people have left one place or state but have not yet entered or joined the next. During the liminal state one's sense of identity dissolves to some extent, as it is a period of transition.

Victor Turner and Mary Douglas developed further theories on rites of passage in the 1960s. Turner coined the term liminoid to refer to experiences that have characteristics of liminal experiences but are individualized and do not involve a resolution of a personal crisis. A graduation ceremony might be regarded as liminal while a rock concert might be understood to be liminoid. The liminal is part of society, a social or religious ritual, while the liminoid is a break from society. Turner stated that liminal experiences are rare and diminished in industrial societies, and are replaced by liminoid experiences.

Types and examples

There are many situations in which rites of passage are observed. Following are some of the most universally recognized.

Life cycle

The events in an individual's life cycle, particularly those surrounding birth, marriage, and death are acknowledged in almost all cultures to be important rites of passage. However, the way in which these events are celebrated varies considerably across countries and regions and within different religious and ethnic groups. The customs and traditions surrounding these events can be elaborate and complex. For example, traditional Hindu funeral ceremonies usually last thirteen days, while Indonesian weddings are often attended by more than a thousand guests.

Birth

In Western cultures pregnancy is often celebrated with a baby shower. In the Jewish tradition a baby boy undergoes brit milah, a religious circumcision, while Muslims and Hindus shave the baby's head on the seventh day.

Marriage

Brides to be in Western countries often receive engagement rings and hold bachelor and bachelorette parties. Traditional American and European brides wear white on their wedding days, a custom which has been adopted by cultures throughout the world, while red is worn by Muslim, Chinese, Indian, Pakistani, and Armenian brides.

Death

Sikh women generally wear white clothes for mourning, although sometimes they wear black. Though there are variations within the Hindu traditions, women generally wear white or black. For example, Jewish mourners returning home from a funeral are normally given a hard boiled egg as a symbol of life. The process of mourning is also conducted according to different traditions, sometimes taking a considerable time period.

Coming of age

Sepik River male initiation through scarification

Coming of age rituals, which occur in different forms in most cultures, are some of the most recognized rites of passage. For example, debutante balls, which are traditionally held in upper class Western society, and quinceañeras, which take place in Hispanic communities, mark a girl's introduction into womanhood. Birthday celebrations often serve as rites of passage, such as "sweet sixteen" parties in the United States. The Poy Sang Long is a ceremony undergone by boys in Burma and Thailand where they become novice monks and temporarily live the monastic lifestyle. In some cultures, coming of age rituals can involve scarification and various other physical endurances.

In 1928, the American cultural anthropologist Margaret Mead published her controversial findings in Coming of Age in Samoa. Her study was conducted in a village of six hundred people on the island of Tau, Samoa. Mead lived with, observed, and interviewed young women, concluding that adolescence in Samoa was a not marked by the emotional or psychological distress, anxiety, or confusion often seen in the United States.

Despite its prevalence in the media, not all cultures undergo adolescence as experienced in America and other Western cultures. The rites of passage which people in the United States typically experience follow a chronological, youth-oriented line. It begins with birth and a child's first steps and first words spoken, and includes childhood events such as learning to ride a bike. Adolescent coming of age would not be complete without the first kiss and first relationship, first car, and first job.

Marriage and children are important rites of passage in the United States, as well as in most other cultures. There are few important recognized rituals in later adulthood in the United States except retirement. While many people around the world and in the U.S. will experience them, the construction of the idea of these events as particularly transformative is deeply rooted in the specific national identity in the United States. These are often mistakenly presented as universal across culture, class, and context, and are mythologized in various national and international media.

Education

Many rites of passage center around a child's education. The first day of school is an especially important rite of passage in Western culture. In various tribal societies, entry into an age grade—generally gender-separated—is marked by an initiation rite, which may be the crowning of a long and complex preparation. Graduation is acknowledged in most cultures as a rite of passage. It is celebrated differently in different areas of the world. For example, in Scandinavia students celebrate russ festivities throughout the month when they graduate high school. In the U.S., Britain, and Canada, the prom is another important rite of passage associated with high school graduation. In Spanish universities, a student who has completed his studies is sometimes submitted to a public questioning by the faculty. If the student passes he invites professors and mates to a party. If not, he is publicly processioned with donkey ears.

Christ underwent the Jewish circumcision, here depicted on a Catholic cathedral; a liturgical feast commemorates this on New Year's Day

Religion

Many rites of passage around the world center on religion. There are the processes of baptism and confirmation in Christian cultures, and the first confession in the Catholic tradition.

Jewish teenagers celebrate their bar mitzvah or bat mitzvah, while younger children in certain Hindu castes celebrate the sacred thread ceremony to mark the beginning of their education. In Amish communities, adolescents will sometimes spend an experimental period living outside the community before deciding whether to return to the church and be baptized as an adult. This rite of passage is known as Rumspringa. The ritual of Vision quest is undergone in some Native American cultures by shaman apprentices. These youths are often required to undergo sensory deprivation in order to help them make contact with the spirits.

Miscellaneous

Other initiation rites include the Walkabout, a process that is believed to be practiced by the Australian Aborigines in which youths spend a period of time alone in the wilderness. Another ceremony of initiation is the Batizados celebration, in which new members are baptized into Capoeira groups, a Brazilian form of martial arts. There are specific rites of passage for the various branches of the Armed forces. For example, in the U.S. Navy, wetting-down is a ceremony in which a Naval officer is ceremonially thrown into the ocean upon receiving a promotion. In many military organizations, as in academic groups such as dorms, fraternities, teams, and other clubs, new recruits are sometimes subjected to hazing.

Nature and significance

The example of a college graduation ceremony demonstrates the three stages of a rite of passage.

  • First or preliminary stage

This change is accomplished by separating the participants from their usual social setting. The students are first separated from the rest of their community, both by gathering together and by wearing distinctive clothing.

  • The Liminal stage

A period during which one is "neither here nor there." When the ceremony is in progress, the participants are no longer students but neither are they yet graduates. This is the distinctive character of liminality.

  • The final or postliminal stage

A period during which one's new social status is confirmed and reincorporated. Upon receiving his or her diploma, the student officially becomes a college graduate. The dean and professors shake the student's hand in congratulation, giving public recognition to the student's new status as a person with a college degree.

Liminality

During the liminal stage, normally accepted differences between the participants, such as social class, are often de-emphasized or ignored. A social structure of communitas forms: One based on common humanity and equality rather than recognized hierarchy. For example, during a pilgrimage, members of an upper class and members of a lower class might mix and talk as equals, when in normal life they would likely never talk at all or their conversation might be limited to giving orders.

In the example of a college graduation ceremony, the liminal phase can actually be extended to include the period of time between when the last assignment was finished all the way through reception of the diploma. The individual has not transitioned to a new stage in life psychologically or physically, and the result is a unique perspective on what has come before, and what may come next.

The time between when a couple become engaged and their marriage, between conception and birth or between death and burial are liminal periods. When Western cultures use mistletoe, the plant is placed in a threshold at the time of the winter solstice. The kiss that occurs under the mistletoe breaks the boundaries between two people. Because what happens under the mistletoe is occurring in ritual time/space, the people kissing are not breaking taboos imposed under normal circumstances by their marriages to (or relationships with) other people.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Christopher, Nancy G., Louise C. Mahdi., and Michael Meade. 1996. Crossroads: The Quest for Contemporary Rites of Passage. Open Court Publishing Company. ISBN 978-0812691900
  • Cushing, P.J. 1998. "Competing the cycle of transformation: Lessons from the rites of passage model." In Pathways: The Ontario Journal of Experiential Education. 9,5,7-12.
  • Frazer, James G. and George W. Stocking. [1890] 1998. The Golden Bough: Abridged Edition. Penguin Classics. ISBN 0140189319
  • Mahdi, Louise C. 1987. Betwixt and Between: Patterns of Masculine and Feminine Initiation. Open Court Publishing Company. ISBN 978-0812690484
  • Mead, Margaret. [1928] 2001. Coming of Age in Samoa: A Psychological Study of Primitive Youth for Western Civilisation. Harper Perennial Modern Classics. ISBN 0688050336
  • Mead, Margaret. [1930] 2001. Growing Up in New Guinea: A Comparative Study of Primitive Education. Harper Perennial Modern Classics. ISBN 0688178111
  • Turner, Victor. 1970. The Forest of Symbols: Aspects of Ndembu Ritual. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press. ISBN 0801491010
  • Van Gennep, Arnold. [1909] 2004. The Rites of Passage. Routledge. ISBN 0415330238

External links

All links retrieved December 14, 2022.

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