Responding to the human crisis in the ceremony Among the short stories "ritual", Yuko Takenaka talks about the terrorist attacks in the middle of Hiroshima's explosion. This story is a creative reaction to the actual destruction witnessed by Hiroko. She may elect to write this story as a novel rather than autobiography to keep himself from suffering. This work can be used as a form of treatment that makes it possible to express feelings without becoming individuals.
A. Brainstorming. Ask students if anyone knows what's going on at the ceremony. Please allow some different answers and convey the actual definition to them before revealing who is right and that no one suggests the correct answer. By brainstorming all the things a student can think, these things are considered adulthood in their lives. Write the answer on the board. B. Mini Lecture / Name Activity: Explain to students that the adult ceremony each person first experienced was born. Babies leave the familiar uterine environment and occupy their positions all over the world, so childbirth is a big adjustment for babies. Naming a baby is part of this birthday ceremony. When naming children, different cultures have many unique customs. For example, some people who belong to Jewish beliefs believe that it is not appropriate to name children by the name of a living person.
Other names passing through the expression are often duplicated. Lifecycle rituals and critical ceremonies are often synonymous with ceremonial rituals related to life, but some contemporary scholars include ceremonies to treat serious diseases in critical ceremonies There are people. The overlapping of rituals of social transformation and religious transformation overlaps crisis rituals. Religious reforms such as baptism and priesthood are always accompanied by changes in society; social transformation such as adulthood and inauguration can also bring new religious status, lifecycle rituals can change the religious status It may accompany it, but it may or may not be accompanied. However, it is useful to distinguish between various rituals with these names.
Many of the most important and common rituals are related to biological crisis or milestones of life, maturity, breeding and death, bring about a change in social status, which in turn leads to social relations with people be connected. Other people celebrate complete cultural changes through rituals, such as entering societies with special interests, for example friendship. Passing through rituals is universal, archaeological presumed evidence (in the form of burial findings) strongly suggests that they can be traced back to very early times. Where overprints are often overlooked by interpreters (perhaps because it seems obvious) is the role of etiquette in providing entertainment.