Magic hat economics: counter-cultural ideals and practices of the Nordic Ting community
Author(s)
Janne Juhana RantalaKeywords
Religious changePostmodernism
Individualism
Spirituality
Spiritualism
Subjectivity
Scandinavia
Social movements
Religious movements
Popular
Environmentalism
Religion (General)
BL1-50
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Show full item recordAbstract
The author's anthropological study concerns one of today’s communities with no shared belief system, but with a clear spiritualist orientation. The Nordic Ting Community does not have any defined or committing roles, specialized distribution of tasks, entrance fee to their two annual gatherings, membership or any formal hierarchy. This exiguity of structural differentiation could well be understood to represent ‘subjective spirituality’. This thesis refers to the decline of institutional forms of religion with, instead, an increase in subjective experience in spirituality. This presentation shows that at least in the author's field of study, there hardly exists any increase in emphasis on individualism in spirituality. Instead the material indicates a relatively long continuum of a self-organized type of communality which could be understood as neither individualistic nor collectivistic. The type of agency observed in the social action of the studied network-like field is intersubjective. This article focuses on the use of the magic hat and the combination of ideals and practices characteristic to the Ting Community, which the author calls the magic hat economics. It is argued that by looking at these kinds of intermediating objects, the problem of individualization can be seen much more clearlyDate
2009-01-01Type
ArticleIdentifier
oai:doaj.org/article:d374f9b168d549dabee3ac591cd439f60582-3226
0582-3226
https://doaj.org/article/d374f9b168d549dabee3ac591cd439f6