Back to Search Start Over

Emile Durkheim and After: The War over the Sacred in French Sociology in the 20th Century

Authors :
Camille Tarot
Source :
Distinktion: Journal of Social Theory. 10:11-30
Publication Year :
2009
Publisher :
Informa UK Limited, 2009.

Abstract

This article analyzes the main lines of the French debate or ‘war’ over the ‘sacred’ during the 20th century. Durkheim, who emphasized the social origin of religion and its integrating function, tied this idea closely together with the sacred/profane -distinction: it is through this distinction that society reflects itself in individuals and imposes its norms and values on them. On the other hand, he explains the alleged universality of the distinction precisely by its social origin. In spite of Durkheim's emphasis on the central place of the sacred in the analysis of religion, the French religious sociology has ever since contested this claim. However, the article claims that these criticisms can be divided into two categories depending on the reasons given for the attack against the Durkheimian conception. These critical approaches, in turn, constitute two ultimately antagonistic sets of theories of the religious itself. The defenders of the ‘subjective sacred’ (Eliade) find the Durkheimian thesis about...

Details

ISSN :
21599149 and 1600910X
Volume :
10
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Distinktion: Journal of Social Theory
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........a714ba346749c4bbcecf39a92ee4353c
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1080/1600910x.2009.9672746