Should We Believe in the Gods of Rain?

Granger, Christophe

Should We Believe in the Gods of Rain? - 2017.


89

For centuries, in the West, and more specifically in France, people would pray, hold processions, and turn to God to be bestowed with rain or fair weather. Then, at the end of the 19th century, these practices, if they did not disappear, no longer seemed legitimate. To explain this meteorological religiosity, we usually consider that it is the expression of a belief or a superstition which the development of a scientific culture is likely to have dispelled. This text shows that all these rituals acts, because they are socially established gestures, do not require any belief, and that their disappearance is due to a historical metamorphosis in the collective relation to weather which turns it into matter of a personal, idiosyncratic taste.

PLUDOC

PLUDOC est la plateforme unique et centralisée de gestion des bibliothèques physiques et numériques de Guinée administré par le CEDUST. Elle est la plus grande base de données de ressources documentaires pour les Étudiants, Enseignants chercheurs et Chercheurs de Guinée.

Adresse

627 919 101/664 919 101

25 boulevard du commerce
Kaloum, Conakry, Guinée

Réseaux sociaux

Powered by Netsen Group @ 2025