CONCEPT
Ritual Process
Turner's three-phase framework (separation, liminality, reaggregation) describing how communities manage identity transformations—inherited from van Gennep, filled with ethnographic substance and extended to historical transitions.
The ritual process is
Victor Turner's elaboration of Arnold van Gennep's three-stage model of rites of passage: separation (removal from ordinary social position),
liminality (threshold state
between positions), and
reaggregation (incorporation into a new position). Turner's contribution was to demonstrate that this sequence is not merely descriptive of tribal initiations but reveals a fundamental pattern in how human communities metabolize significant change. The ritual process works by temporarily dissolving the categorical distinctions that organize social life, creating a
liminal space where perception can be reorganized and new social forms discovered, then crystallizing new structures that incorporate what was learned in
the threshold. Turner insisted the process is not linear—structure and
anti-structure exist in dialectical tension, each generating conditions for the other, and healthy societies oscillate between periods of structural stability and liminal dissolution.
In The You On AI Field Guide
Turner's fieldwork among the Ndembu provided the empirical foundation. He documented initiation ceremonies lasting weeks, in which boys were removed from their mothers, taken to secluded bush camps, subjected