Beschreibung:
By bringing together three different academic disciplines ¿ anthropology, political science and history ¿ and covering a variety of different parliamentary assemblies, both in Europe and in the United States, this book aims to offer a fresh approach to parliamentary studies. The authors assess the importance of ritual and symbolic communication in different parliamentary settings. The underlying question that each practitioner and scholar addresses is: Do parliamentary rituals really matter? Some of the contributors argue that legislative procedure is more telling of the role and reputation that a parliament has in a given society than its rituals and ceremonies. Others stress the relevance of these ritual expressions for conveying political sense and meaning to the public.
Contents: Emma Crewe/Marion G. Müller: Introduction - Marc Abélès: Parliament, politics and ritual - László Kürti: Symbolism and drama within the ritualisation of the Hungarian parliament - Bernard Moreau: The political meanings of military rituals in the French National Assembly - Emma Crewe: Rituals and the Usual Channels in the British House of Lords - Richard Baker: Ritual and ceremony in the United States Senate - Alastair J. Mann: The Scottish Parliaments: the role of ritual and procession in the pre-1707 parliament and the new parliament of 1999 - Werner Patzelt: Parliaments and their Symbols. Topography of a field of research - Marion G. Müller: Parliaments and their Liturgies.