(Redirected from Collective Effervescence)'Collective effervescence (CE)' is a perceived energy formed by a gathering of people as might be experienced at a sporting event, a
carnival, a
rave, or a
riot. This energy can cause people to act differently than in their everyday life.
CE in religion
Collective effervescence is the basis for
Émile Durkheim's theory of
religion as laid out in his 1912 volume ''
Elementary Forms of the Religious Life''. This book is largely based on studies of the
Australian aborigines.
Durkheim argues that the universal religious
dichotomy of profane and sacred results from the lives of these tribe members: most of their life is spent performing menial tasks such as hunting and gathering. These tasks are profane. The rare occasions on which the entire tribe gathers together becomes sacred, and the high energy level associated with these events gets directed onto physical objects or people which then become sacred.
For Durkheim, religion is a fundamentally social phenomenon. The beliefs and practices of the sacred are a method of
social organization. This explanation is detailed in ''Elementary Forms'' "Book 2/The Elementary Beliefs", chapter 7, "Origins of These Beliefs: Origin of the Idea of the
Totemic Principle or
Mana".
According to Durkheim:
:''god and society are one of the same…the god of the clan…can be none other than the clan itself, but the clan transfigured and imagined in the physical form of a plant or animal that serves as a totem.''
[Durkheim, Émile. ''The Elementary Forms of Religious Life''. New York: The Free Press, 1995, p. 208. (1965, p. 236)]
Literature
★ Durkheim, ''The Elementary Forms of the Religious Life'', (1912, English translation by Joseph Swain: 1915) The Free Press, 1965: ISBN 0-02-908010-X; HarperCollins, 1976: ISBN 0-04-200030-0; new translation by Karen E. Fields, Free Press 1995: ISBN 0-02-907937-3
See also
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Bandwagon effect
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Carnival
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Crowd psychology
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Collective behavior
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Collective consciousness
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Collective hysteria
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Collective intelligence
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Grateful Dead concerts
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Ochlocracy
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Herd behavior
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Herd instinct
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Hooliganism
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Football (soccer) hooliganism
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Group action (sociology)
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Group behaviour
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Violence in sports
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Keeping up with the Joneses
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Mass action (sociology)
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Mob rule
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Friedrich Nietzsche on herd morality
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Peer pressure
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Riot
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Sheeple
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Social comparison theory
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Spiral of silence
References
External links
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An analysis collective effervescence among homosexuals during Mardi Gras