Sunday, September 21, 2008

2. Religión y Estudios Religiosos

(Religions and Religious Studies)

Both Jonathan Z. Smith and Tomoko Masuzawa address the 19th century’s need to classify religions into neatly labeled boxes. In The Invention of World Religions, Masuzawa traces the roots of this need to classify back to the 17th century when historians sought to “Europeanize” Christianity by proposing that the true history of Christianity, i.e. the religion of Europe, was not to be found in the Hebrew Bible, but rather in a Hellenic tradition (Masuzawa, xiii).

There was a dual purpose for this hellenization and aryanization of Christianity. Primarily, it was to distinguish it from the increasingly Semitic seeming tradition of Islam. Secondly, the ideals of empirical data were becoming progressively more widely accepted and expected. The ‘modern’ notion that most of the prized institutions of the West (i.e. science, art, rationality, democracy, etc) were of Greek origin conspicuously highlighted Christianity as the non-Hellenic anomaly among the Hellenic pedigree of the European heritage (Masuzawa, 18-19).

This focus on the scientific as the ideal is what characterized the 19th century. It was the 19th century that gave rise to the notion of ‘social sciences’ – that is, empirically studying those fields that had traditionally been viewed through a philosophical lens. Masuzawa holds that at the end of the 18th century, history was no longer a narration of morally and spiritually edifying tales of the past. Rather, for the first time, history had become the work of researchers, whose cardinal objective was to establish certain undeniable facts (or, truths) about the past (Masuzawa, 15). In his article Eastern Scripture Among the World’s Religions, Robert Van Voorst asserts that the 19th century saw European scholars begin a systematic enterprise of critically investigating religious traditions. These scholars became concerned primarily with context rather than with content - paying attention to proper translation rather than theology (Van Voorst, 2).

Smith states that the issue of classifying ‘religions’ arose in response to the “explosion of data” (Smith, 275). Tools such as first-hand missionary testimonies of foreign ‘religions’, ethnographic research, encyclopedias of religions, lexica, and handbooks were used to organize the empirical data regarding ‘religions’ (Smith, 275).

To classify a set of data causes it to become pigeonholed into that category rather than exist in its organic form. Unlike the data achieved in a Chemistry laboratory (where nonetheless human error is inevitable), the ‘data’ of human phenomena cannot be neatly boxed into groups with no outliers. For this very reason, applying the supposedly higher ideals of science to the traditionally philosophy-focused fields of human nature proves problematic.

In order to properly classify religions in the 19th century, certain basic schemes had to be employed. Masuzawa writes, “the ‘great’ religions of the world are often classified with binary, tripartite, or even multifarious divisions” (Masuzawa, 2). The basic divide in the binary schema was Christianity versus everything else. This ambiguous ‘everything else’ category was further broken down by Abrahamic traditions versus the other, more mysterious, ‘religions’. Masuzawa refers to this distinction as “prophetic religions” versus “wisdom religions” (Masuzawa, 3). Under the tripartite scheme of classification, religious traditions are broken down by geography: the Near East, South Asia, and the Far East. Furthermore, this schema seems to give credence to a racially divisive notion of ethnic difference (Masuzawa, 3). Additionally, religions that do not fit into this neat cookie-cutter diagram fall into the more minor categories of primitive, tribal, or basic religions (Masuzawa, 4). Apparently, a lack of written history equals a lack so of history in general, hence the term ‘primal’ for religious traditions that are pre-literate! Masuzawa asserts that the 19th century obsession with the primitive and the original is that it was also a turn away form the euro-centric and euro-hegemonic conception of the world – moving toward a more egalitarian and later delineation. The Van Voorst article holds on several instances that the presence of scripture is the binding feature of a religious tradition.

To empirically historicize the world’s religions, Smith outlines four basic assumptions that underlie the act of classification itself: 1) ‘Religion’ is a category that is imposed from the outside on a culture. 2) ‘Religion’ is thought to be a universally present human experience. 3) The characteristics of ‘Religion’ are universally apparent to everyone. And 4) ‘Religion’ as an anthropological, rather than a theological, category (Smith, 269).

To conclude I would like to bring up a point that is sort of highlighted in the Van Voorst article, that also came up in a conversation that I was having with a friend recently. That is, the idea and practice of categorization, while a 19th century development, has become a 20th - and 21st - century mainstay. These broad stroke categories are how we are thought about the world's religions, but also how we learn about the world in general. For instance, Hindus today refer to themselves as such - they may not be able to explain what that means or identify with a different type of "Hindu" but each Hindu is convinced of the banner under which he or she falls. An interesting example of this is the RLG205 - Introduction to South Asian Religions course - the professor for that course was constantly challenged because a practicing Hindu student in the class hadn't learned, or didn't subscribe to, what was being taught. Although there were often contradictory viewpoint, each practicing Hindu student was convinced that he or she was the 'real' Hindu! So, my point and question is this: while we are self-aware enough to acknowledge the categories that exist, how do we reformulate a schema that, while only a couple hundred years old, seems ingrained in our sense of (religious) self?

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

Hi Roselle,

Before I comment I should probably let you know that I've just joined the course and am now part of this subgroup so I'm sorry to report you'll have one additional blog to comment on from here on out! Here's the URL: http://sipihr.blogspot.com

That said, the final point you made regarding the staying power of these very problematic 19th century classifications really resonated with me. In particular, coming from a Muslim background and studying Islam in the university classroom, I've had the sometimes-awkward,
more-often-illuminating experience of having my tradition explained to me in terms I was totally unfamiliar with. This is particularly true for those, like me, who belong to a smaller persuasion of a faith, coming into contact with the more conventional interpretations of their traditions. The result can be a very troubling and yet I'm grateful for the experience because I've had to grapple with conflicting tenets within one tradition and resolve them, an altogether fulfilling process.

I definitely agree that the temptation by earlier scholars to neatly package religious traditions has had an immense impact. I think this is especially the case in the post-colonial context, in regions that have faced the surprise pull-out of colonial powers and individuals are left often for the first time in their lifetimes, reconciling the Other in light of categories imposed upon them by the powers that be.

But I would venture to say that for some communities, particularly those that have been marginalized historically, there is also an Othering processing occurring from the inside out. That is to say that in the face of oppression, be it social or political or any other, communities may find themselves defining what they "are" by what they "are not". So while Euro-centric classifications are perhaps the most visible in the post-colonial context, I wonder if these represent just one process of categorization, undertaken by all communities historically, to assert and delineate their various identities...

In any case, my own experience in the study of Islam has been especially rewarding when I've found commonalities amongst various interpretations and the most amazing when I've seen how just one example of scripture can speak to so many different individuals and traditions in a diversity of ways.

Yikes, this has gotten pretty long! Anyways, just some thoughts.

Nathalie LaCoste said...

Hey Roselle!

I agree with your comment that using a "scientific method", one which could be used in a laboratory is a problematic approach to the study of human behavior and religious experience. However, that being said, I don't think that there is ANY way of categorizing people which would please everyone. The same can be said about religions. The methods which are employed today when we speak about religion reflect the period in European history when there was a strong sense of "us" and "other". While today we view this as biased and unimportant, it has a strong impact on how we understand ourselves within the field of religion today.

I really wanted to answer the question that you posed at the end of your entry this week, but alas I have no answers, just more questions! The categorization of religion is very ingrained in the way we think and I guess the best way to try to overcome those preconceived notions is to acknowledge them and continue to discuss and wrestle with these issues. In a sense being open to critique and analysis and not being afraid to test and probe our doctrines (secular or religious) may be the only way in which we may be able to overcome and are able to reformulate a new religious schema.

Mike Jones said...

Hey Roselle,
Excellent conclusion. It highlights perfectly the problems that are associated with our religious taxonomy, and also the problems of doing away with it. I experienced the same thing in my Introduction to Western Religions class (a terrible, terrible title for a class). When we studied Islam (for a thrilling three weeks), we only focused on the Sunni tradition and even then the various schools of thought were pureed into some sort of monolithic legal code that not a single Muslim student in the class agreed with. This shared experience between all religious studies students just points out the obvious, that there is no Islam, there is Islams. No Christianity, just Christianities. Even relative new comers to our religious landscape, like the Mormons, have suffered schisms. I do not think this takes away from the classifications themselves though, as amazingly imperfect as they are, since they now are supposed to be broad brushstrokes. It would be impossible to teach a 1-term introductory course without them. Once a student’s interest is peaked, however, they quickly learn how wonderfully diverse the religious experience is, and that no tradition is monolithic. The problem is leaving students and the vast majority of people who don’t bother to look into religion with these monolithic labels, but I cannot think of a way that could be solved.

Ada Chidichimo Jeffrey said...

Hi Roselle,
I agree that classifying religious data can prove problematic. Religious studies is sort of caught between a desire to be a science and empirically accessible, and the desire to be in the domain of the arts. I think we need some sort of system of classification in order to understand the world and in order to study a phenomenon and have a group of scholars subscribing to basically the same set of assumptions. However, in response to your comment about the ingrained nature of Western systems of classifications, I think that we need definitions that come from other cultures. Historically the job of classifying and compartmentalizing different religions has been done by the West, and therefore reflected a Western agenda. With globalization though, everyone becomes part of the debate, including subjects of religion who were previously "objects" to the Western scholar. Even if the study of religions is hopelessly Western (which I am not sure it is), I think an alternative classificatory system from an alternative point of view (Eastern), would be valuble and may serve to alleviate the dominance of the the current system.

Anonymous said...
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unreuly said...

Shanifa, the ethnography that I refered to in class is called "The Nuer" - it was written in 1940 by E.E. Evans-Pritchard.
Hope that helps!