Disenchantment
Template:Short description Script error: No such module "other uses". Template:Use dmy dates Template:Use Oxford spelling Script error: No such module "Unsubst". In social science, disenchantment (Template:Langx) is the cultural rationalization and devaluation of religion apparent in modern society. The term was borrowed from Friedrich Schiller by Max Weber to describe the character of a modernized, bureaucratic, secularized Western society.Template:Sfn In Western society, according to Weber, scientific understanding is more highly valued than belief, and processes are oriented toward rational goals, as opposed to traditional society, in which "the world remains a great enchanted garden".Template:Sfn
Enlightenment ambivalence
Weber's ambivalent appraisal of the process of disenchantment as both positive and negativeTemplate:Sfn was taken up by the Frankfurt School in their examination of the self-destructive elements in Enlightenment rationalism.Template:Sfn
Jürgen Habermas has subsequently striven to find a positive foundation for modernity in the face of disenchantment, even while appreciating Weber's recognition of how far secular society was created from, and is still "haunted by the ghosts of dead religious beliefs."Template:Sfn
Wang Huning has written that disenchantment constitutes a dialectical tension in the West which drives forward social and material progress at the expense of "authority, moderation, self-sufficiency, and self-confidence."[1]
Some have seen the disenchantment of the world as a call for existentialist commitment and individual responsibility before a collective normative void.Template:Sfn
Sacralization and desacralization
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Disenchantment is related to the notion of desacralization, whereby the structures and institutions that previously channeled spiritual belief into rituals that promoted collective identities came under attack and waned in popularity. According to Henri Hubert and Marcel Mauss, the ritual of sacrifice involved two processes: sacralization and desacralization.
The process of sacralization endows a profane offering with sacred properties – consecration – which provides a bridge of communication between the worlds of the sacred and profane. Once the sacrifice has been made, the ritual must be desacralized in order to return the worlds of the sacred and profane to their proper places.Template:Sfn
Disenchantment operates on a macro-level, rather than the micro-level of sacralization. It also destroys part of the process whereby the chaotic social elements that require sacralization in the first place continue with mere knowledge as their antidote. Therefore, disenchantment can be related to Émile Durkheim's concept of anomie: an unmooring of the individual from the ties that bind in society.Template:Sfn
Re-enchantment
In recent years, Weber's paradigm has been challenged by thinkers who see a process of re-enchantment operating alongside that of disenchantment.Template:Sfn Thus, enchantment is used to fundamentally change how even low-paid service work is experienced.Template:Sfn
Carl Jung considered symbols to provide a means for the numinous to return from the unconscious to the desacralized worldTemplate:Sfn – a means for the recovery of myth, and the sense of wholeness it once provided, to a disenchanted modernity.Template:Sfn
Ernest Gellner argued that, although disenchantment was the inevitable product of modernity, many people just could not stand a disenchanted world, and therefore opted for various "re-enchantment creeds", such as psychoanalysis, Marxism, Wittgensteinianism, phenomenology, and ethnomethodology.Template:Sfn A noticeable feature of these re-enchantment creeds is that they all tried to make themselves compatible with naturalism: i.e., they did not refer to supernatural forces.Template:Sfn Likewise, Charles Taylor identified certain aesthetic impulses—those found in Romanticism, magic realism, and "[watching] movies about the uncanny"—as failed attempts to recover an enchanted sense of self.[2]
Criticism
The American historian of religion Jason Josephson-Storm has challenged mainstream sociological and historical interpretations of both the concept of disenchantment and of reenchantment, labeling the former as a "myth". Josephson-Storm argues that there has not been a decline in belief in magic or mysticism in Western Europe or the United States, even after adjusting for religious belief, education, and class.Template:Sfn
See also
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- Desacralization of knowledge
- Iron cage
- Marx's theory of alienation
- New Age
- The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism
- Resacralization of knowledge
- Romanticism
- Tripartite classification of authority
- Urbanization
References
Citations
Works cited
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Further reading
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- Joas, Hans (2021). The power of the sacred: an alternative to the narrative of disenchantment. Trans. by Alex Skinner. NY: Oxford University Press.
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