| Brian J. McVeigh - 1997 - 296 páginas
...individual, but at the same time, this symbol denotes social norms and ideas (1967: 30, 54-5). Thus, "norms and values, on the one hand, become saturated...become ennobled through contact with social values" (ibid.: 30). When used in rituals, metaphors have a transformative power that convinces the participants... | |
| Judy Rosenthal - 1998 - 296 páginas
...coming to see, is precisely a mechanism that periodically converts the obligatory into the desirable. The irksomeness of moral constraint is transformed into the love of virtue" (1967: 30). Although Turner himself later came to emphasize antistructure and communitas in ritual... | |
| Klaus Neumann - 2000 - 500 páginas
...qualities between its poles of meaning. Norms and values, on the one hand, become saturated with emotions, while the gross and basic emotions become ennobled...constraint is transformed into the 'love of virtue'." - MORRIS, B., Anthropological studies of religion, S. 243, entnimmt solchen und ähnlichen Zitaten... | |
| W. S. F. Pickering - 2001 - 512 páginas
...and communitas, are mediated is instructive in this regard (see Nisbet 1993:83; 6no 1996:80). In his words, 'norms and values, on the one hand, become...become ennobled through contact with social values' (Turner 1967:30; Bell 1992:172). It is also worth noting that Turner associates his concepts of communitas... | |
| Susan Crane - 2002 - 288 páginas
...ritual symbol, we may perhaps say, effects an interchange of qualities between its poles of meaning. Norms and values, on the one hand, become saturated...become ennobled through contact with social values." 33 Turner's early and still influential analysis of the ritual process makes sense of the dual pressures... | |
| Kees Waaijman - 2002 - 986 páginas
...the spiritual form is acted out it effects "an interchange of qualities between its poles of meaning. Norms and values, on the one hand, become saturated...emotions become ennobled through contact with social values."325 3. The most eminent form of symbolization is the face. The face is a form which, "divested... | |
| Isaac Jack Lévy, Rosemary Lévy Zumwalt - 2002 - 292 páginas
...of social interaction, undergirded as it is by the principle of limited good. As Turner emphasizes, "Norms and values, on the one hand, become saturated with emotion, while tke gross anJ basic emotions beflflfflfl 6IlIl01)10(1 thlOllgh COI> tact with social values" (30).... | |
| Abner Cohen - 2004 - 280 páginas
...between its poles of meaning. Norms and values, on the one hand, become saturated with emotion, 176 while the gross and basic emotions become ennobled...of moral constraint is transformed into the love of goodness. Ritual thus becomes a mechanism which periodically converts the obligatory into the desirable.10... | |
| Chaim Noy, Erik Cohen - 2012 - 280 páginas
...direct physiological stimuli . . . effects an interchange of qualities between its poles of meaning. Norms and values on the one hand, become saturated...become ennobled through contact with social values" (Turner 1969:30). Furthermore, crying in public is understood by many students and guides as the ultimate... | |
| Mansoor Moaddel - 2005 - 459 páginas
...in broad social processes that transform the obligatory and constraining into something desirable. "The irksomeness of moral constraint is transformed into the 'love of virtue.' "22 Weber also considers the subjective orientation formed by certain religious beliefs such as the... | |
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