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Revitalization Movements

Explore the concept of revitalization movements, which are deliberate efforts by a group to create a new culture, as described by Anthony F. C. Wallace. This article analyzes the theory and various types of movements, their causes, and the phases involved in cultural transformation.

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Revitalization Movements

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  1. Revitalization Movements A.F.C. Wallace

  2. Background • In 1956, Anthony F. C. Wallace published a paper called "Revitalization Movements" to describe how cultures change themselves. A revitalization movement is a "deliberate, organized, conscious effort by members of a group to create a new culture," and Wallace describes at length the processes by which a revitalization movement takes place.[1] • Wallace derived his theory from studies of so-called primitive peoples (preliterate and homogeneous), Wallace believed that his revitalization model applies to movements as broad and complex as the rise of Christianity, Islam, Buddhism, or Wesleyan Methodism.

  3. Theory of Revitalization Movements • Many types of movement, like people movements, revival movements, cargo cult, social movements, sect formation • Described differently by different disciplines • Wallace searched for a common theory Revitalization Movements Anthony F. C. Wallace American AnthropologistNew Series, Vol. 58, No. 2 (Apr., 1956), pp. 264-281 (article consists of 18 pages) Published by: Blackwell Publishing on behalf of the American Anthropological Association

  4. Movements as a Response to… • Social scientists generally agree that revitalization movements are societal responses to excessive stress. However, several mutually exclusive theories have been proposed to explain the generation of a revitalization movement: acculturation holds that conquest and other forms of hegemony generate utopian movements; social evolution views revitalization movements as expressions of empowerment by disadvantaged classes or groups; and absolute deprivation posits that dissatisfaction with a low standard of living leads people to adopt a revolutionary ideology. The most widely accepted theory, relative deprivation, suggests that revitalization movements may occur when a significant proportion of a society finds its status and economic circumstances trailing those of the rest of society, even if the dissatisfied group has a relatively high standard of living according to independent economic measures or in comparison to its past standard of living.

  5. Definition • A deliberate, organised conscious effort to construct a more satisfying culture • Must perceive their culture as a system • Must see it as inadequate • Must seek to innovate change • Generally cultures drift, evolve, axculturate gradually • Revitalization requires a rapid change, a rapid shift in Gestalt

  6. 1.Stress as Condition • Cultures seek integration that gives meaning • In emergency some members will seek to action to preserve the culture

  7. Mazeways • A mental image of society • Revitalization changes the mazeways • Discuss: What happens as churches become more traditional but the culture keeps changing? • Revitalization is collective action to change the mazeways and the “real” systems

  8. Ways of focusing on new mazeways • Revivalistic: Going back to the old mazeways • Millenarian: Going on to the new Millenum • Cargo cults – injecting new elements into the mazeways • Messianic – New saviour

  9. Failed Revitalization Movements • New denominations form after failure of revitalisationmovments to transform an old denomination

  10. PHASES OF a Revitalization Movement • Steady State • Individual Stress • Cultural Disorientation • Period of Revitalization • Mazeway reformulation • Communication • Organisation • Adaption • Cultural Transformation • Routinization • New Steady State

  11. Mazeway Reformulation • The role of the Prophet • Builds on existing cultural elements • A moment of insight • Preaching the Vision • Organization of followers behind the prophet as he and they hear God

  12. 4.Adaptation • Opposition • Adapting the vision to interest groups • Limiting the impact of opposition

  13. 5 Cultural Transformation • As a significant sector of the population comes to accept the new vision • Social revitalization occurs • Cultural change • Decrease in stress • Successful social, economic and political reforms

  14. 6. Routinization • Becomes ritualised in culture

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