Rethinking the Profane: Power, Politics and Identity

Robbie Duschinsky

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    Durkheim generally theorises the profane as a residual category: it is that from which the sacred is set apart. Subsequent social scientists using the framework of the sacred in their research have tended to neglect the profane, presuming that it has no specific effects or significance. This paper will suggest, through a reading of the work of Pierre Bourdieu, that the ‘ambiguity of the sacred’ noted by Durkheim, its production of pure and impure aspects, is actually an effect founded on latent divisions within the profane. Though previous scholars have not noted this contribution, Bourdieu presents us with a new way of theorising the profane. What appeared to Durkheim, and later researchers, as an ambiguous and arbitrary shifting between pure and impure aspects of the sacred is actually predictable, once attention is trained on the complexity of the profane. Implied in this new understanding is that the sacred is not politically or socially neutral. It should rather be seen as complicit in the consecration of relations of power, and in the occlusion of these relations.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)119-126
    JournalInternational Journal of Interdisciplinary Social Sciences
    Volume5
    Issue number3
    Publication statusPublished - 2010

    Keywords

    • Pure and impure
    • profane
    • Durkheim
    • Bourdieu
    • social power

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