Victor Turner opens his classic analysis of ritual structures with a quote from fellow anthropologist
"Rituals reveal values at their deepest level. Men express in ritual what moves them most, and since the form of expression is conventionalised and obligatory. It is the values of the group that are revealed. I see in the study of rituals the key to an understanding of the essential constitution of human societies"
Victor Turner studied among the Ndembu of northern Zambia. Many tribes within the region have complex initiation rites with long periods of seclusion.
Turner found the Ndembu rituals were inextricably linked to every other facet of their cultural structures economic relations, hunting, power structures, and kinship were only understandable within the context of rituals.
Their values were embodied and expressed through symbolic rituals.
The Ndembu word for "ritual" aligns with "obligation" or "special engagement". Rituals are performed if people or groups have failed to meet their obligations to the community or ancestors
Turner builds off the work of
"Women's cults have the tripartite diachronic structure made familiar to us by the work of Arnold van Gennep. The first phase, called Ilembi, separates the candidate from the profane world; the second, called Kunkunka (literally, "in the grass hut"), partially secludes her from secular life; while the third, called Kutumbuka, is a festive dance, celebrating the removal of the shade's interdiction and the candidate's return to normal life."
Rites of Passage accompany every change of place, social position, and age. There are three phases an initiate moves through:
"During the intervening "liminal" period, the characteristics of the ritual subject (the "passenger") are ambiguous; he passes through a cultural realm that has few or none of the attributes of the past or coming state" (94)