TY - JOUR
T1 - Unbecoming individuals
T2 - The partible character of the Christian person
AU - Mosko, Mark S.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2015 Hau: Journal of Ethnographic Theory.
PY - 2015/3/1
Y1 - 2015/3/1
N2 - According to the received wisdom in Melanesian ethnography and elsewhere, Christianity is "unrelentingly individualistic" (e.g., Robbins 2004: 293). In this chapter, drawing upon the notion of "dividual" or "partible personhood" of the New Melanesian Ethnography and implicit in the classic Van Gennepian model of rites of passage, I revisit Louis Dumont's, Kenelm Burridge's, and Max Weber's authoritative conceptualizations of Christian personhood. I seek to demonstrate that in the early Christian church and the later Protestant Reformation of Luther and Calvin, the person, whether human or divine, qualifies instead as a dividual-a kind of agent radically distinct from the canonical "possessive individual" of Western political and economic discourse. Following Dumont, Burridge, and Weber on close reading, I argue that the seeming "individuality" of Christian persons consists merely in singular moments of overarching processes of elicitive detachment, gift-transfer, incorporation, and reciprocation whereby the constituent parts of total or overall dividual persons are transacted. Christian "individualism," in short, is nothing less than an instance of dividual personhood and agency, fundamentally distinct from the possessive individual of modern secular society.
AB - According to the received wisdom in Melanesian ethnography and elsewhere, Christianity is "unrelentingly individualistic" (e.g., Robbins 2004: 293). In this chapter, drawing upon the notion of "dividual" or "partible personhood" of the New Melanesian Ethnography and implicit in the classic Van Gennepian model of rites of passage, I revisit Louis Dumont's, Kenelm Burridge's, and Max Weber's authoritative conceptualizations of Christian personhood. I seek to demonstrate that in the early Christian church and the later Protestant Reformation of Luther and Calvin, the person, whether human or divine, qualifies instead as a dividual-a kind of agent radically distinct from the canonical "possessive individual" of Western political and economic discourse. Following Dumont, Burridge, and Weber on close reading, I argue that the seeming "individuality" of Christian persons consists merely in singular moments of overarching processes of elicitive detachment, gift-transfer, incorporation, and reciprocation whereby the constituent parts of total or overall dividual persons are transacted. Christian "individualism," in short, is nothing less than an instance of dividual personhood and agency, fundamentally distinct from the possessive individual of modern secular society.
KW - Agency
KW - Christianity
KW - Dividuals
KW - Individualism/individuality
KW - Melanesia
KW - Personhood
KW - Ritual process
KW - Sacred/profane alternation
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84939529717&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.14318/hau5.1.017
DO - 10.14318/hau5.1.017
M3 - Review article
SN - 2575-1433
VL - 5
SP - 361
EP - 393
JO - HAU: Journal of Ethnographic Theory
JF - HAU: Journal of Ethnographic Theory
IS - 1
ER -