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SOCI 3006 – Collective Behaviour
May 2007
Lecture 8 1. Administrative
all material on web 2. Images, Miracles and Apparitions
a common form of collective behaviour
generally take place in a public, secular setting, despite their
often religious nature (note Durkheim on sacred/profane)
Images
belief in the spontaneous appearance of a religious
figure on an everyday object
e.g. - the face of Jesus on a grilled cheese sandwich;
Jesus and other figures observed on walls, automobile
body parts; frying pans; windows, storage tanks, etc.
all follow a similar pattern; some individual notices
the image, interprets it as the likeness of a religious
figure, interprets this as some form of miracle, tells
friends, who may then tell others
2. Images, Miracles and Apparitions (cont’d)
Images
interest/belief in images usually relatively short-term
those who believe in the image accept that it is caused
by a mundane event (rust, stains, lighting, etc.) but
believe that these things have been somehow
manipulated by a divine force to show the image
- accessibility by large crowds a key factor
Miracles
tangible physical objects that ‘miraculously’ move, or
cry, drip blood, etc.
miracles often more denomination-specific, less
plausible to general public, more likely to occur indoors 2. Images, Miracles and Apparitions (cont’d)
Miracles
usually belief/non-belief straightforward – either the
statue of the Virgin is bleeding, or it is not, or at least
not real blood
usually requires predisposition to believe (religious)
Apparitions
- involve the miraculous appearance of a figure – religious,
ghosts, angels, famous people – but unlike images and
miracles, the apparition if most often visible to only
one or a handful of people
- may involve claims from some individuals that they are
able to communicate with the apparition
- why so many apparitions involve young girls?
2. Images, Miracles and Apparitions (cont’d)
The Soybean Savior – Jesus on an Oil Tank
Fostoria, Ohio, 1986
Locher analyzes incident using Smelser’s value-added
theory
structural conduciveness (religious Christian
community, rural, image was easily viewed from cars,
August was nice weather in evenings, vacation time,
image appeared just off the most traveled road in town)
- structural strain (high crime rate, hard economic times,
very hot, dry weather)
2. Images, Miracles and Apparitions (cont’d)
The Soybean Savior – Jesus on an Oil Tank
generalized belief (devout believers, devout skeptics,
doubting participants, nonbelievers)
- mobilization of participants (local people strongly
urged others to take a look; the media got involved
(August 1986 a slow news time), religious leaders
social control – local authorities unable to deter
onlookers, so managed, facilitated orderly viewing
note: how important a single individual’s ‘definition of the
situation’ was in creating, shaping events
what caused this event to end? 2. Images, Miracles and Apparitions (cont’d)
Our Lady of Clearwater
Clearwater, Florida, 1996 – 2001
again, use of Smelser’s value-added theory
also, use of Turner and Killian’s types of crowd
participants (ego-involved, concerned, insecure,
spectators, exploiters)
3. Rumours, Urban Myths and Urban Legends
a rumour is an unconfirmed statement or fact passed through
informal communication
often rumours arise in situations of anxiety/uncertainty, where
individuals will seek any sort of information to make sense of
what is happening
tellers may repeat rumours out of a feeling of ‘being in the
know’ or feeling powerful – status, attention, to create excitement
believers consider the information plausible and accept it as
fact
rumours often serve to confirm what believers already suspect or
want to believe is true
3. Rumours, Urban Myths and Urban Legends (cont’d)
urban legends are a form of rumour told as a story (the
bathtub legend, or the Eddie Murphy legend; the Hippie girl
and the baby in the oven)
urban myths are a form of rumour told in regard to a specific
‘fact’ (cocaine in Coca Cola; tooth in Coca-Cola; the myth
of babies sacrificed by Satanic Cults – Geraldo Rivera)
the Proctor and Gamble rumour – and analysis using the
emergent norm theory
3. Rumours, Urban Myths and Urban Legends (cont’d)
uncertainty and the ‘rumour public’ – belief that ‘something is
wrong with the country’ and this ‘Satanism’ promoted by a
large corporation could be it
urgency – if something not done quickly, the devil would take over
but note as well poor economy at the time
communication of mood and imagery – the circular reaction
among the rumour public – the role of the church newsletters and
direct-mail flyers (also, eventually, Am-Way)
constraint – in particular, among religious congregations fueled
by their Ministers
3. Rumours, Urban Myths and Urban Legends (cont’d)
selective individual suggestibility – polarization of beliefs,
leading to spread of acceptance of rumour by those already
selectively likely to accept (religious groups)
permissiveness – free to discuss, share concerns, different
versions, ‘takes’ on the rumour, openly
note: why do we accept rumours when we suspect/know they
are false?