The commodification of the religious impulse finds its most overt expression in the New Age movement and its subculture neopaganism. This article examines discourses in the pagan community in an Australian state. Pagans, who have been characterized as individualist, eclectic, and diverse in their beliefs and practices, network through electronic mail discussion lists and chat forums as well as through local and national offline gatherings. We explore community building and boundary defining communications in these discourses. In particular, we examine interactions that reveal the mobilization of pagans' concern with authenticity in the context of late-capitalism, consumer lifestyles, and media representations of the "craft." Our analysis highlights a series of tensions in pagans' representations of and engagement with consumer culture which are evident in everyday pagan discourse. These notions of in/authenticity are captured by invoking the "fluffy bunny" sanction.
Journal article
Discourses of authenticity in a pagan community: the emergence of the ‘fluffy bunny’ sanction
Journal of Contemporary Ethnography, Vol.35(5), pp.479-505
2007
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Abstract
Details
- Title
- Discourses of authenticity in a pagan community: the emergence of the ‘fluffy bunny’ sanction
- Creators
- Angela Coco - Southern Cross UniversityIan Woodward - University of Queensland
- Publication Details
- Journal of Contemporary Ethnography, Vol.35(5), pp.479-505
- Identifiers
- 1466; 991012821692502368
- Academic Unit
- School of Arts and Social Sciences
- Resource Type
- Journal article