Nicole Berry- The Ritual Process: Structure and Anti-Structure
Reflection of assigned book 1:
In the book, The Ritual Process: Structure and Anti-Structure, by Victor Turner, he talks about rites of passage or “transitions” as having been marked by three distinct phases that are separation, margin, and aggregation. In the first stage, separation, the individual withdraws from everyone and starts to transition from one stage or status to another. An example of this could be cutting your hair as you do when you join the military and "cutting away" your old civilian life. The second stage is the margin or as also stated in the book the liminal period is the in-between stage where the individual is not a part of either stage or status as they have just left their old self behind but haven’t joined the next one. An example of this could be the week after finals before graduation, as we have left and finished school so that we are no longer senior, and the next class has risen to that title, but we are not yet graduated. The third stage of the transition is the final stage called aggregation. This stage is when the individual assumes their new “identity” and must follow the standards of the new role they assume within the community whether it’s becoming the new shaman or in modern-day this can be signified through things like a graduation or a wedding.
In the book, The Ritual Process: Structure and Anti-Structure, by Victor Turner, he talks about rites of passage or “transitions” as having been marked by three distinct phases that are separation, margin, and aggregation. In the first stage, separation, the individual withdraws from everyone and starts to transition from one stage or status to another. An example of this could be cutting your hair as you do when you join the military and "cutting away" your old civilian life. The second stage is the margin or as also stated in the book the liminal period is the in-between stage where the individual is not a part of either stage or status as they have just left their old self behind but haven’t joined the next one. An example of this could be the week after finals before graduation, as we have left and finished school so that we are no longer senior, and the next class has risen to that title, but we are not yet graduated. The third stage of the transition is the final stage called aggregation. This stage is when the individual assumes their new “identity” and must follow the standards of the new role they assume within the community whether it’s becoming the new shaman or in modern-day this can be signified through things like a graduation or a wedding.
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