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Breaking Disciplinary Walls in the Examination of Anzac as Religion

Anzac was first proposed as Australia’s civil religion in the 1960s. Since then, comparisons with conventional religion—the presence of ritual, music, and movement; the deification of symbolic figures; and the centrality of sacrifice—have continued to be observed within the humanities; these have re...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Human arenas: an Interdisciplinary journal of psychology, culture, and meaning culture, and meaning, 2021-06, Vol.4 (2), p.239-256
Main Authors: Slocombe, Bianca, Kilmister, Michael
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Anzac was first proposed as Australia’s civil religion in the 1960s. Since then, comparisons with conventional religion—the presence of ritual, music, and movement; the deification of symbolic figures; and the centrality of sacrifice—have continued to be observed within the humanities; these have relied primarily on observable parallels with Christian tradition. Though historians and social sciences scholars have drawn a comprehensive picture of the “who,” “what,” and “when,” traditional disciplinary silos must be overcome to compellingly address the “how” and “why.” Theoretical and empirical contributions from the scientific study of sacred values and religiosity, spanning fields of cognitive science, cultural and cognitive anthropology, and psychology, among others, can explain the pervasive cultural influence and endurance of the Anzac tradition. This paper provides an integrative analysis of the parallels between Anzac and religion. It draws on the key cognitive, environmental, and social mechanisms from the frontier of religiosity and sacred value research—minimally counterintuitive narrative structure, credibility enhancing displays (CREDs), priming, rituals and group cohesion, and the backfire effect—to provide a science-based foundation for arguments for Anzac’s religiosity.
ISSN:2522-5790
2522-5804
DOI:10.1007/s42087-020-00109-7