Bringing Kierkegaard into anthropology: repetition, absurdity, and curses in Fiji

Type Journal Article - American ethnologist
Title Bringing Kierkegaard into anthropology: repetition, absurdity, and curses in Fiji
Author(s)
Volume 41
Issue 1
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2014
Page numbers 163-175
URL http://www.sv.uio.no/sai/english/research/projects/anthropos-and-the-material/Intranet/ritual-practi​ces/Reading group/tomlinson-bringing-kirkegaard-into-anthropology.pdf
Abstract
The Danish philosopher Søren Kierkegaard offers two concepts that can strengthen anthropological analyses of Christianity. The first is “repetition,” or the act of “recollecting forward,” which provides a model of transformation that depends neither on
deep continuity nor on decisive break. The second is “absurdity,” the faithful but painful acceptance of paradox as irreducible to logical resolution, which challenges eudemonic understandings of Christianity as a religion oriented toward comfort and
satisfaction. I demonstrate the usefulness of Kierkegaard’s concepts through an analysis of indigenous Fijian Methodists’ interest in repeatedly engaging with curses from ancestors as a way to overcome them. [Christianity, Methodism, Kierkegaard, ritual, curses, Fiji]

Related studies

»