Mulholland - Anthropology and Attachment
Mulholland - Anthropology and Attachment
Mulholland - Anthropology and Attachment
Peter Mulholland
In the second half of the last century Ireland, along with much of the Western world,
witnessed a remarkable surge of interest in experientially-based forms of religion that
often emphasized spiritual or ‘magico-religious’ healing practices 2 . As Robbins’s
1988 review of the literature on modern New Religious Movements (NRMs) shows,
the sociological origins and functions of these movements has been extensively
studied and theorized. In this essay I will argue that recent developments in the field
of developmental psychology bridge the gap between sociological and psychological
theories of religious behaviour in a way that promises to deepen our understanding of
religious behaviour and explain individual and collective surges of interest in
devotional and magico-religious forms.
In the 1960s numerous new and some not-so-new religious movements like
the Jehovah's Witnesses and Seventh Day Adventists emerged and flourished in
Ireland (see Tierney). Visiting Christian evangelists contributed to this religious flux
with rallies and crusades, and ‘the healing ministry’ was revived in the mainstream
Christian denominations. The rise of these NRMs was accompanied by a surge of
interest in occult practices and reported sightings of UFOs as well as in various forms
of folk or faith healing and experiential forms of religiosity within the Catholic
Church (Mulholland, 102–36; Roch, 188–9). This surge was most apparent in the
overlapping waves of enthusiasm for faith healing and Charismatic Renewal (Taylor);
in the revival of devotional exercises like the ‘nine-day novena’ (Inglis); in the tens of
thousands who traversed the country in response to reports of ‘moving statues’ and in
the ‘enormous’ increase in the number of Irish pilgrims going to Lourdes (Ryan and
Kirakowski). 3 Many of the NRMs that flourished at this time soon faded from view
while others came to be seen as constituents of the New Age Movement (NAM) that
emerged in the 1970s. This notoriously ‘diffuse’ movement is made up of many more-
or-less discrete groups and practices. It is an umbrella movement that operates as a
network for the promotion of a huge variety of ‘self-spiritualities’ and ‘holistic’ or
‘Mind-Body-Spirit’ therapies (Heelas, 2, 9, 68, 75, 80, 82; Puttick, 130). With its
millenarian goal of transforming the world through healing the self, the NAM was
soon characterised as representing ‘a culture of narcissism’ (Lasch, 396–7). Here in
Ireland the NAM persists mainly in the form of innumerable spiritual and holistic
healing groups and professional healers who provide alternative therapies in private
homes or from rented rooms in hotels and community centres and in the hundreds of
dedicated healing centres, spas, ashrams and retreat houses that have been established
all across the country (see Costigan).
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(Inglis, 11, 38). Though the legalistic form of religiosity has come to dominate Irish
Catholicism, Inglis argued, Irish Catholics still tend to ‘vacillate’ between different
ways of being religious and Catholicism here remains an ‘amalgam’ of ways of being
religious. Inglis describes this amalgam as consisting of three ideal types that he calls
‘(a) magical-devotional’, ‘(b) legalist-orthodox’, and ‘(c) individually principled
ethics’. He explained type (a) as providing a refuge in times of personal difficulty and
as being aimed mainly at achieving ‘material transformations in this world’. He
suggested that type (b) emerged out of the magical-devotional type that prevailed into
the 19th century and as having begun to give way to type (c) in the 1950s; mainly
among sections of the urban educated where increasing numbers seemed to be
choosing the ‘beliefs, practices and ethics to which they adhere’ (Inglis, 12–38 and
244). Indeed Inglis suggested that all three forms of Catholicism should be seen as
developmental stages operating at individual and society-wide levels but with the
legalistic and magical forms not being easily differentiated in practice, as both tend to
be governed by a ‘strict adherence’ to the magical formula or to the ‘letter of the law’.
However, though he saw them as developmental stages, Inglis insists that these stages
should not be seen as part of some kind of definite or irreversible trend. Rather, they
are seen as being strongly related to prevailing needs and circumstances and Inglis
explained eruptions of the magical-devotional form as being ‘undoubtedly linked to
changes in social and economic conditions’ but primarily to ‘a disenchantment with
the institutional Church’s failure ‘to respond to the more emotional, experiential
religious needs of the people’ (Inglis, 28–38).
Inglis explained the rise and dominance of the institutional Church as having
been a product of a complex interaction of macro-historical and micro-social
processes. These included the effects of famine, shifts in the relationship between
Britain and Ireland, improvements in medicine, changes in farming practices and in
family dynamics. These changes also saw the Catholic Church becoming deeply
involved in shaping Irish society through ‘a systematic process of socialisation
exercised in churches, schools, hospitals, and homes’ where the now religiously
‘valorised’ Irish mother served as the Church’s ‘organizational link’ in the inculcation
of more civil behavioural norms and values (Inglis, 64, 100, 184, 191). Inglis
described this ‘civilizing process’ as having to do with ‘changes in the way people
adapted to living in more complex, centralised and regulated communities and
societies’. And this involved an ‘increasing expectation … that people be … more
peaceful, considerate and self-reflective’ (Inglis, 68, 98, 130–33). The inculcation of
more civil ways of behaving was at the heart of the Church’s ‘civilizing mission’ and
involved the promotion of a ‘sentimental and moral’ approach to childrearing amongst
Irish mothers (Inglis, 199). However, as Inglis explains, this shift brought with it a
puritanical approach to childrearing that restricted the physical expressions of
affection and instilled a ‘sense of shame and guilt about the body’ that supported the
‘embodiment of the rules and regulations of the Church in successive generations’.
And, he argues, this puritanical ethos had the effect of inhibiting ‘self-confidence,
ambition and achievement’ and inculcated an ‘emotional awkwardness’ and lack of
‘communicative competence’ that became part of ‘the Irish habitus’ (Inglis, 138, 157,
200, 249, 256).
Inglis recognizes the fact that ‘there are numerous different ways in which
Irish Catholics are religious’ and he is careful to point out that his thesis is a ‘highly
generalized and summary account’ of historical processes that rests on the use of
‘general concepts’ and ‘analytical devices to unify a vast array of people, practices
and events’ (Inglis, 20, 12, 101). Nevertheless, his generalized approach meant that he
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Ireland during the rise of magical-devotional forms of Catholicism and other magical
and millenarian movements. This flourishing of NRMs was indeed accompanied by a
heightening of collective anxiety and existential angst. The Irish media kept the
country well informed of the threat posed by the Cold War and the development of the
Irish television station, Telefís Éireann, in the ’60s meant that Irish people were
exposed to vivid and almost daily coverage of the war in Vietnam and of the Northern
‘Troubles’ that threatened, and occasionally spilled over into, the Republic. Tierney
(6) reckoned ‘the Troubles’ attracted some of the ‘itinerant preachers’ who arrived in
Ireland in the early ’70s. But the war in N. Ireland wasn’t the only domestic source of
anxiety at this time. The country was plagued by a combination of economic problems
at a time of rising expectations and there was plentiful evidence for the kind of ‘rapid
social change’ and ‘crisis of meaning’ theories that were advanced to explain NRMs.
Kirby (19) reckoned that the launching of the first Programme for Economic
Expansion in 1958 was a catalyst for change in the economic and cultural history of
the Irish Republic. Nic Ghiolla Phádraig (1995) and Fuller (2004) are in substantial
agreement with this view and media archives provide ample evidence of the
remarkable changes that were taking place in the socio-economic, educational,
cultural, religious, and political life of the country during this time (Mulholland, 102–
73). These diverse arguments and bodies of evidence lend support the view that the
flourishing of interest in experientially-based forms of religiosity and magico-
religious practices is driven by both internal and external forces and circumstances.
What they lack, however, is a theoretical framework that explains the dynamics of the
culture-psyche interface in steering some sections of the population towards new and
exotic magico-religious movements. John Bowlby’s neo-Freudian Attachment Theory
and recent developments in the field of developmental psychology provide a
framework for exploring and explaining the complexities of this interface.
Mary Ainsworth developed a laboratory procedure called ‘the strange situation’ that
tested Bowlby’s theory and showed that differences in the way mothers habitually
interact with their offspring profoundly affect their children’s sense of security and
shape their attachment behaviour. Ainsworth observed three distinct patterns of
attachment behaviour that she called ‘secure’, ‘avoidant’, and ‘resistant’, with both of
the latter being classified as ‘insecure’ types (Goldberg, 11).
Cognitive anthropologist Charles Nuckolls cited various bodies of evidence in
support of Bowlby’s theory and held that it provided the kind of empirically verifiable
approach that science itself touts. Nuckolls took the violation of every child’s
attachment assumption (that the bond with the mother ‘mediated by intimate physical
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contact’ will continue forever) to be ‘nearly’ universal. And he argued that that
psychological conflict is transferred onto religious representations and becomes
‘crucial to the development of belief in superhuman agencies’ and the possibility of
resolving ‘conflicted attachment wishes’. Taking the Jalaris of South India as a case
study, he argued that their vocabulary of possession ‘represents, through transference,
values and attitudes originally associated with the relationship between mother and
child’; and that in so doing their religious beliefs provide them with a way of coping
with unresolved attachment conflicts (183–97). However, Nuckolls went on to note
that, while the violation of attachment assumptions was ‘nearly universal’, that
violation did not give rise to cross-culturally similar outcomes because both the
method and outcome of individuation processes varies ‘between social groups
because of the different values placed on emotion and fusion and autonomous
individuation’. With his focus on cultural patterns Nuckolls took no account of
Ainsworth’s finding that differences in the ways mothers from the same culture
interact with their children cause them to develop one or other of the three attachment
patterns revealed in her laboratory studies. So, while he makes a strong case for
Attachment Theory in the interpretation of religious behaviour, Nuckolls, like Inglis,
pays no attention to how variations in or deviations from religiously valorised
behavioural models of parenting and socialization might drive the cognitive and
religious development of the members of even the most ostensibly homogenous of
cultures or communities along different paths.
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surge of Irish pilgrims to apparition sites abroad, and ‘moving statues’ during the
1970s and 80s. The understanding of how the propensity for magical thinking of this
type can be intensified by emotionally-charged contexts helps explain why surges of
magical-devotionalism tend to be associated with particular historical periods and
deepens our understanding of the personal proclivities that Taylor and Carroll
associated with religious quests and attempts to re-establish the presence of a mother
figure.
Conclusions
In his 1999 review of developments in psychological anthropology Philip Bock held
that ‘the actual psychological processes that produce [religious] conformity in some
instances, resistance or rebellion in others, still need to be clarified’ (208). Attachment
theory and its recent elaboration by Fonagy’s team provide a framework for clarifying
those processes and explaining their historical and socio-cultural origins. Attachment
theory was based on the premise that humans have an evolved survival need/drive to
establish an attachment to what Bowlby described as some ‘differentiated and
preferred individual, who is usually conceived as stronger and/or wiser’ (129). The
manner in which that universal human need is met differs from culture to culture and,
as Nuckolls explained, is represented in religious transferences that can help people
cope with unresolved attachment needs or conflicts (183–97). However, as Inglis
observed, religious representations also inform and shape attachment behaviour and
can be used to change or, perhaps more accurately, to valorise historical shifts of
emphasis in relational values and behaviour. And, as Taylor noted, those shifts can
play out differently in the personal or familial and class-related quotidian life
experiences of the members of even the most apparently homogeneous of religious
communities. Mentalization theory enhances our ability to explain how these
diachronic shifts and demographic differences can support the kind of religious
‘vacillations’ and periodic oscillations that were discussed by Inglis and Taylor.
What Fonagy’s team refers to as ‘realistic externalizations’ and ‘concrete’ or
‘magical’ thinking featured large in the many experientially-based charismatic,
devotional, and magico-religious beliefs and healing practices that flourished in
Ireland and elsewhere in the decades after World War II. Somatic and psychosomatic
complaints and psychological malaise or psychosocial alienation underpinned the
formation of a multitude of little ‘communities of affliction’ (Turner in Taylor, 223)
in which the ‘somatization’ of affects was often what Kleinman called the preferred
‘idiom of interpersonal distress’ (10). The explanation of how those with a poor
capacity for mentalization are more likely to experience bouts of psychic equivalence
in emotionally charged contexts refines the ‘crisis theory’ view of NRMs. It also helps
to extend our understanding why many of the NRMs are characterised by intense and
exciting gatherings and dramatic or climactic group rituals. The developmentalist
explanation of the ‘affect regulation’ benefits of the externalization of affects helps
explain why insecure types persist in practices that repeatedly failed to bring about the
promised medical benefits or the arrival of some kind of personal transformation or
millenarian event. This approach may also provide a framework for explaining how
religiously marked (i.e. ‘set apart and sacred’) or ritualised externalizations can trigger
the kind of mystical experiences that are reported as ‘born again’ or Pauline-type
conversions of the sort that are reputed to have effected transformations in the
subjective and intersubjective or social being of some people.
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Notes
1
The field and archival research upon which this paper is based was financed by a scholarship from the
Irish Council for Research in the Humanities and Social Sciences.
2
The term ‘magico-religious’ was used by Marett to refer to what he believed was an early stage in the
development of religion and magic (1914, xxi). I am using the term in a very loose sense to refer to
forms of religiosity that have a magical dimension and emphasise the use of ritual practices and
objects in attempting to manipulate supernatural powers and achieve changes in this world.
3
The Sunday Independent, 11–7–76
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