Them that believe: a postmodern exploration of the contemporary Christian serpent-handlers of Appalachia

Authors

  • Ralph Hood University of Tennessee

Keywords:

Psychology and religion, Interdisciplinary approach to knowledge, Knowledge, Theory of, Methodology, Appalachian Region, Postmodernism, Fundamentalism, Pentecostalism, Serpents -- Religious aspects -- Christianity, Snake cults (Holiness churches)

Abstract

The call for a new paradigm is loud and clear and consistent with postmodern methods. They are no gold standard to be applied to all investigations; no master narrative to be defended. Interdisciplinary, as the author tries to demonstrate, can mean not only cooperation among disciplines, but also the use of a variety of often discipline favoured methods by a single investigator or a team of investigators whose location within a particular ‘discipline’ is both historically contingent and likely dated in terms of its usefulness. Likewise, the use of multilevel considerations means that the diversity of methods and approaches at various levels of abstraction are necessary to begin any study of religious phenomena in their immense complexity. This study of serpent handlers focuses upon archival research; hermeneutical explorations of textual criticism of the Bible; ethnography linked to videotapes; phenomenological interviews analyzed in terms of a hermeneutical method that reveals the meaningfulness of handling serpents, being anointed, and the experience of near death from serpent bites. The author is committed to exploring the meaning of serpent handling from personal and cultural perspectives, and also takes into account psychological theories to link the symbolic and sign value of serpents that further does justice to the power of the serpent to elicit genuine religious experiences and to serve as an apologetic for a tradition that has been maligned and misunderstood by lay persons and scholars alike. 
Section
Articles

Published

2009-01-01

How to Cite

Hood, R. (2009). Them that believe: a postmodern exploration of the contemporary Christian serpent-handlers of Appalachia. Scripta Instituti Donneriani Aboensis, 21, 72–91. https://doi.org/10.30674/scripta.67356