Conversion as Colonization: Pagan Reconstructionism and Ethnopsychiatry

Authors

  • Anne Ferlat Independent scholar

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/pome.v16i2.21546

Keywords:

European Native Faiths, Indigenous Studies, Paganism

Abstract

The present study examines contemporary Pagan movements which, situated on a spectrum with native faiths (“reconstructionist movements”) and universalist groups, exemplify two philosophical and religious trends: universalism and indigenism. Through forms of crosscultural psychology, sometimes called “ethnopsychiatry,” I compare contemporary Paganism to the colonization of indigenous populations through the development of acculturation models and the analysis of the benefit of reclaiming one’s own culture. I analyze from a sociological perspective what their native faiths bring to members of Pagan reconstructionist movements in societies which have endured different waves of acculturation. I argue that after modernity, liquid modernity or postmodernity, transmodernity is at the core debate in our multicultural societies, in particular, in Europe where the discussions about identity are virulent and show a disorientation of a continent and political institutions, which oscillate between multiculturalism and federalist/separatist viewpoints. In such a context, native faiths might inspire political and cultural projects as Europe is seeking and searching for common denominators.

Author Biography

  • Anne Ferlat, Independent scholar
    An independent scholar in France, Anne Ferlat received her MPhil from the University of the West of England in 2009.

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Published

2015-08-25

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Ferlat, A. (2015). Conversion as Colonization: Pagan Reconstructionism and Ethnopsychiatry. Pomegranate, 16(2), 207-238. https://doi.org/10.1558/pome.v16i2.21546