Religious Conversion as a Personal and Collective Accomplishment
- 1 January 1979
- journal article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Sociological Analysis
- Vol. 40 (2) , 158-165
- https://doi.org/10.2307/3709786
Abstract
Religious conversion has conventionally been treated as something that happens to the person. This represents a passivist paradigm within the mechanistic world view of classical science. An alternative paradigm is proposed from an activist perspective within a contextual world hypothesis typical of interactionist and dramaturgical analysis. In this view, conversion is treated as the accomplishment of an actively strategizing seeker interacting with the others constituting a religious collectivity. The approach is illustrated from the authors earlier investigations of how seekers act to discover and make use of a particular means of personal transformation offered by and institutionalized within a conversionist group. Problems of maintaining a transformed life and difficulties in conceptualizing conversion are discussed in some detail.Keywords
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