Read Dancing in the Streets: A History of Collective Joy Page 33


  François-Poncet, André

  Franklin, Aretha

  Frazer, James

  Freeman, Walter J.

  Freke, Timothy

  French Revolution

  crowd behavior and

  Festival of Federation

  Festival of the Supreme Being

  festivals of, as prototype for fascist spectacles

  Freud, Sigmund

  Fritschze, Peter

  Fronto

  Full Witness Apostolic Church of Zion

  functionalist view of ecstatic behavior

  Furness, Clinton

  Galileo

  Gandy, Peter

  Garcia, Jerry

  Garfinkel, Yosef

  Germany

  epidemic of depression in

  Luther’s Reformation

  passion plays in

  repression of carnival in

  Ghost Dance

  Gillen, Frank

  Gilsenan, Michael

  Givant, Michael

  Glitter, Gary

  glossolalia (tongue-speaking)

  Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von

  Golden Bough, The (Frazer)

  Goodman, Felicitas

  Goody, Jack

  gospel music

  Grace Abounding to the Chief of Sinners (Bunyan)

  Granet, Marcel

  Grateful Dead

  Graves, Robert

  Gray, Thomas

  Great Revival in America

  Greece, ancient deities of

  Dionysius, see Dionysus (Bacchus)

  drama of

  itinerant charismatics in

  military preparedness and ecstatic rituals

  mystery cults of

  religion of

  vase art of

  Greeks and the Irrational, The (Dodds)

  Greenblatt, Stephen

  Gregory IX, Pope

  Gregory of Nazianzus

  Grooming, Gossip, and the Evolution of Language (Dunbar)

  groups:

  defense against predators

  evolutionary advantages of forming

  hunting in

  love among members of

  guns

  carnival’s demise and

  disciplined armies and

  nobility’s role changed by

  Gurevich, Aron

  Guttmann, Allen

  Gutwirth, Madelyn

  Habits of the Heart: Individuals and Commitment in American Life (Bellah)

  hair-tossing, ecstatic

  Haitian tradition of Vodou (voodoo)

  Halloween

  Halmos, Paul

  Hamadsha brotherhoods of Morocco

  Hambly, W.D.

  Hau-hau cult, Maori

  Hawaii, Christian missionaries in

  Hawks of the Faithful

  Heart of Darkness (Conrad)

  Hebrews, ancient

  hellenized Jews, Dionysus, and Jesus

  Purim celebrations

  Hecker, J. C.

  Henderson, “Crazy George,”

  Hera

  Hibbert, Christopher

  Hightower, Jim

  Hill, Christopher

  hippies

  Hippocrates

  Hispala

  Hitler, Adolf

  Holiness churches

  Holly, Buddy

  holy dance (ring-shout)

  Homer

  homosexuality gay culture, festivities of

  “Hottentot,”

  Hsia, R. Po-Chia

  hunting, communal

  Huntington, Samuel P.

  Hutton, Ronald

  Huxley, Aldous

  hymn singing

  hysteria

  immortality

  imperialism, European

  attack on native communal religions and rituals

  black carnival

  ecstatic revolution

  export of Christian attitude toward emotionalism

  extermination of natives

  the preservation of native religions and rituals

  slavery and

  India

  individualism

  discovery of the inner self

  Innocent III, Pope

  Inquisition

  interiorization

  Iran

  Isis

  Islam

  fundamentalist

  Wahhabi movement to reform, see Wahhabism

  Islamists, militant

  isolation, sense of

  religion and

  Isoma cult ritual of Ndembu people

  Italy, fascist spectacle in

  Jackson, Mahalia

  Jacobins

  Jagger, Mick

  Jamaica

  James, William

  Jamison, Kay Redfield

  Jefferson Airplane

  Jensen, Grodon

  Jesus

  appeal to women and the poor

  death of the historical

  as healer

  hedonic vision of community

  hellenic Jews, Dionysus, and

  as miracle worker

  parallels between Dionysus and

  personal salvation and

  as son of Yahweh

  as victim god

  as wandering charismatic

  wine, association with

  see also Christianity

  Jesus Mysteries, The (Freke and Gandy)

  Jews:

  ancient Hebrews, see Hebrews, ancient

  medieval Christian festivals and

  jitterbugs

  Johnson, Samuel

  Jonkonnu

  Joyce, Lillian

  Juneteenth

  Junod, Henry

  Juvenal

  Keeping Together in Time (McNeill)

  Kerényi, Carl

  Kimbangu, Simon

  Kinsbourne, Marcel

  Kinsman, Robert

  Kirby, Jon P.

  Krishna

  !Kung healing rituals

  Kuper, Simon

  Kutcher, Louis

  Ladurie, Emmanuel Le Roy

  Lanternari, Vittorio

  Lateran Council of 1215

  Lawler, Lillian

  Le Bon, Gustave

  Lenin, Nicolai

  Lever, Janet

  Lévi-Strauss, Claude

  Lewis, I.M.

  liminal role of ecstatic ritual

  Lindholm, Charles

  Little Richard

  Livy

  Lofland, John

  London Missionary Society

  Lonsdale, Steven

  Louis XIV, King

  love:

  among large groups

  dyadic

  lower classes

  ecstatic ritual viewed as domain of

  French Revolution, crowd behavior of the

  sports and

  Lucian

  Luther, Martin

  Lutheranism

  Maccabees

  Mackenzie, John

  McNeill, William H.

  Mahmud II, Ottoman sultan

  Mair, Lucy

  Maori Hau-hau cult

  marching bands

  Marcion

  “Marseillaise, La,”

  Mars (god of war)

  Martin, Linda

  Martyr, Justin

  Marx, Karl

  masking

  banning of

  in prehistoric art

  at sporting events

  Maurice of Orange

  Maximilla

  maypole

  Meeks, Wayne A.

  Mehmet Ali Pasha

  melancholy, epidemic of

  decline in opportunities for pleasure and

  discovery of the inner self and

  historically

  loss of cure for

  religion and

  spread through Europe

  suicide and

  Melville, Herman

  Menomini Indians

  Mesopotamia, ancient

  Métraux, Alfred

  Mich
al (King Saul’s daughter)

  Michelet, Jules

  militarism:

  ecstatic rituals, effect on practice of

  in Roman culture

  military discipline

  dromedaries and

  guns and

  military uniforms

  millenarian movements

  Miller, James

  Miller, Reverend Darlene

  Mirabeau

  mirror neurons

  mirrors, discovery of the inner self and popularity of

  Mithras

  modernization

  Montanists of Phrygia

  Montanus

  Moorehead, Alan

  Moritz, Karl Philipp

  Moroccan rituals, Islamic

  Morris, Desmond

  Morrison, Jim

  Mosse, George L.

  Muir, Edward

  Music Journal

  Mussolini, Benito

  Myerly, Scott

  mystery cults of ancient Greece

  Namaquas of South Africa

  Napoleonic Wars

  nationalism

  fascist spectacles as displays of

  sporting events and

  Nazi rallies and public rituals

  Nepos, Cornelius

  neuroscience

  New Guinea

  Nietzshe, Friedrich

  nobility, see upper class

  Nuremberg congresses, annual

  Riefenstal’s Triumph of the Will

  Nxele

  Oakland A’s Drummers

  Obeah

  “Ode to Melancholy,”

  Oesterreich, T. K.

  Old Testament

  Olmsted, Frederick Law

  Oppenheim, Janet

  oreibaia (winter dance)

  “oriental religions,”

  Origen

  orpheotelestae

  Osiris

  Otto, Walter

  Ovid

  Ozouf, Mona

  Palestinian archeological sites

  Pan

  parades, military

  Parisian “convulsionary” cult

  passion plays, German

  Paul:

  letter to the Corinthians

  tongue-speaking and

  Pausanias

  Pentecostalism

  Pentheus

  personal space, notion of

  Philip III, King of Spain

  Pilgrim’s Progress (Bunyan)

  “Pleasures of Melancholy, The,”

  Pliny the Younger

  Plutarch

  Polynesia

  Pontius Pilate

  Popolo d’Italia

  Portefaix, Lillian

  Porter, Roy

  possession by a deity, see trance behavior

  predators, group defense against

  prehistoric roots of ecstatic rituals

  Presbyterianism

  Presley, Elvis

  Prester John

  Price, Robert M.

  primitives, see “savages,” European idea of

  Priscilla

  Protestantism

  Calvinism, see Calvinism

  imperialism and export of, see imperialism, European

  Luther’s Reformation

  Wahhabism and the Reformation, parallels between

  protest movements, elements of carnival in

  psychology

  of crowd behavior

  Publius Aebustius

  Punic Wars

  Puritans, English

  Putnam, Robert D.

  Pythia, the

  Raboteau, Albert

  Reformation, Protestant: Calvinism, see Calvinism Luther’s

  Reformed Church of Holland

  Rembrandt

  RenaissanceIn

  Rhys, Jean

  rhythm and blues

  Ribeiro, Claudio (“Cotton Bud”)

  Riefenstal, Leni

  ring-shout

  Ritual Process, The (Turner)

  ritual vs. festivity

  Robespierre, Maximilien

  Robin Hood

  “Rock and Roll Part 2,”

  rock art, prehistoric

  rock rebellion

  commodification of rock music

  the counterculture and

  opposition to

  rock festivals

  sports audiences and

  Rogers, Nicholas

  role playing

  Rolling Stones

  “Rolling Thunder” events

  Roman Empire:

  military discipline of

  spectacles of

  Romans, France, carnival in

  Rome, ancient

  early Christianity in

  homosexuality, attitude toward

  militaristic culture

  official religion in

  political menace of “oriental” cults

  repression of ecstatic rituals in

  Rosenberg, Josh

  Rousseau, Jean-Jacques

  Sabazios

  safety-valve interpretation of carnival

  St. Blaise’s Day festivities

  St. Eluned’s Day

  St. John’s Day

  Saint-Just, Louis de

  St. Stephen’s Day

  Samarin, William

  Samburu men of Kenya

  Santeria

  Sass, Louis

  Satan

  crowd behavior and

  Saturnalia, Roman

  Saud, Muhammad ibn

  “savages,” European idea of

  see also imperialism, European

  Savonarola, Girolamo

  Schechner, Richard

  Scipio Aemilianus Africanus

  Scribner, Bob

  Segal, Charles

  Segrave, Kerry

  self, sense of

  discovery of the inner self

  self-flagellation

  Sennett, Richard

  sex

  ecstatic rituals including

  female passivity

  Freudian psychology

  homosexuality

  rock rebellion and

  sexual revolution

  sexual selection, dance and ecstatic rituals and

  Shakespeare, William

  shamans

  Shango

  sharia law

  Shirer, William

  Shiva

  slavery:

  European imperialism and

  in North America

  preservation of ecstatic religions and rituals

  rebellions

  Smith, Adam

  Smith, Morton

  soccer

  World Cup

  social hierarchy:

  in ancient Rome

  effect on traditional ritual

  social scientists, ecstatic behavior as viewed by

  society emergence of concept of

  sociology

  Solomon, Andrew

  Somalia, therapeutic celebrations in

  South America:

  European imperialism in

  sports and sports fans in

  Spain, epidemic of depression in

  speaking in tongues

  spectacles:

  fascist, see fascist spectacles

  modern civilization and

  sports as

  Speer, Albert

  Spencer, Baldwin

  sports and sporting events

  age demographics of fans

  carnivalizing of

  commercialization of

  costuming at

  crackdown on

  face painting

  the fan as spectacle

  feasting at

  history of Western

  nationalism and

  physical expressions of excitement

  rhythmic participation of fans

  rock music and

  sports bars

  stadiums

  team mascot

  televized

  wearing of team colors

  Springsteen, Bruc
e

  Stallybrass, Peter

  Starace, Achille

  Stern Katherine

  Stewart, Rollen (“Rock ’n’ Rollen”)

  Stoeltje, Beverly

  Stoler, Ann

  Strasbourgers’ custom of Roraffe

  Styron, William

  subjectivity, rise of

  Sufism

  suicide

  Suryani, Luh Ketut

  Tahiti

  tarantella

  Taussig, Michael

  Taylor, Frederick Winslow

  techniques of ecstasy

  Tertullian

  theater

  Theseus

  Thompson, E. P.

  Tiberius, emperor

  Tiryns, myth of the three princesses of

  Toland John

  Tolstoy, Leo

  tongue-speaking

  Touched with Fire (Jamison)

  tragedy, Greek

  Trajan, emperor

  trance behavior

  Greek maenads and

  possession by a deity

  tongue-speaking and

  Treatise of Melancholie (Bright)

  Trilling, Lionel

  Trinidad

  Triumph of the Will

  Tswanas of southern Africa

  Tuan, Yi-Fu

  Turner, Victor

  Twycross, Meg

  Uganda, Christian ritual in

  Ukraine:

  Hasidic pilgrimage to Uman

  Orange Revolution in

  upper class:

  disdain for ecstatic rituals

  manners and etiquette, emergence of

  sports and

  withdrawal from public festivities

  see also imperialism, European

  upward mobility

  urbanization

  Vecsey, George

  Vellacott, Philip

  Vincent, Ted

  violence:

  of crowd behavior, see crowd behavior

  dangers of carnival

  of maenadism

  at sporting events

  Vodou (voodoo)

  Wahhab, Muhammad ibn Abd al-

  Wahhabism:

  ibn Saud and

  parallels with the Protestant Reformation

  Walzer, Michael

  warfare, gun-based

  see also militarism

  Warton, Thomas

  Watchtower movement, African version of

  wave, the (by sports fans)

  Weber, Marianne

  Weber, Max

  Weir, Bob

  White, Allon

  Wilson, Bryan

  Womyn’s Music Festival

  work ethic

  working class, see lower classes

  Wounded Knee

  Yahweh

  Dionysus, identification with

  Jesus as son of

  as stern, impersonal deity

  Yup’ik people of Alaska