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Violence and new religious movements: The relationship between cognitive dissonance and perceived pressure

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Violence and new religious movements: The relationship between cognitive dissonance and perceived pressure . / Connah, L.
In: International Journal for the Study of New Religions, Vol. 11, No. 1, 05.08.2021, p. 57-75.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Connah L. Violence and new religious movements: The relationship between cognitive dissonance and perceived pressure . International Journal for the Study of New Religions. 2021 Aug 5;11(1):57-75. doi: 10.1558/ijsnr.19504

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Connah, L. / Violence and new religious movements : The relationship between cognitive dissonance and perceived pressure . In: International Journal for the Study of New Religions. 2021 ; Vol. 11, No. 1. pp. 57-75.

Bibtex

@article{69e03e2ea92b4262a2775b13953992c1,
title = "Violence and new religious movements: The relationship between cognitive dissonance and perceived pressure ",
abstract = "This article revisits the controversies sparked by two new religious movements (NRMs) in the run up to the millennium—the tragedies that unfolded in Jonestown and Tokyo—which have forever altered discussions on new religions and violence. This paper explores the impact of pressures both external and internal on The Peoples Temple and Aum Shinrikyo and suggests two new points of focus: perceived pressure and cognitive dissonance. As time progressed, both movements experienced rejection from wider society, leading them to become increasingly worldrejecting (Wallis 1984) and causing dissonance between the teachings of their prophetic leaders and their uncomfortable reality. Actual external pressures such as persecution by social and governmental agencies, as well as the perception of external pressure (the feeling of rejection),strengthened the internal pressures of cognitive dissonance and ultimately to self-destructive violence in such groups. For decades scholars have investigated the impacts of endogenous and exogenous pressures on NRMs, and while this article focuses on events that occurred over twenty years ago, there is still room to explore the dynamic relationship between the perception of pressure and catastrophic violence. ",
keywords = "Aum Shinrikyo, Cognitive dissonance, Endogenous, Eschatology, Exogenous, Perceived pressure, The Peoples Temple, Violence",
author = "L. Connah",
year = "2021",
month = aug,
day = "5",
doi = "10.1558/ijsnr.19504",
language = "English",
volume = "11",
pages = "57--75",
journal = "International Journal for the Study of New Religions",
issn = "2041-9511",
publisher = "Equinox Publishing Ltd",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Violence and new religious movements

T2 - The relationship between cognitive dissonance and perceived pressure

AU - Connah, L.

PY - 2021/8/5

Y1 - 2021/8/5

N2 - This article revisits the controversies sparked by two new religious movements (NRMs) in the run up to the millennium—the tragedies that unfolded in Jonestown and Tokyo—which have forever altered discussions on new religions and violence. This paper explores the impact of pressures both external and internal on The Peoples Temple and Aum Shinrikyo and suggests two new points of focus: perceived pressure and cognitive dissonance. As time progressed, both movements experienced rejection from wider society, leading them to become increasingly worldrejecting (Wallis 1984) and causing dissonance between the teachings of their prophetic leaders and their uncomfortable reality. Actual external pressures such as persecution by social and governmental agencies, as well as the perception of external pressure (the feeling of rejection),strengthened the internal pressures of cognitive dissonance and ultimately to self-destructive violence in such groups. For decades scholars have investigated the impacts of endogenous and exogenous pressures on NRMs, and while this article focuses on events that occurred over twenty years ago, there is still room to explore the dynamic relationship between the perception of pressure and catastrophic violence.

AB - This article revisits the controversies sparked by two new religious movements (NRMs) in the run up to the millennium—the tragedies that unfolded in Jonestown and Tokyo—which have forever altered discussions on new religions and violence. This paper explores the impact of pressures both external and internal on The Peoples Temple and Aum Shinrikyo and suggests two new points of focus: perceived pressure and cognitive dissonance. As time progressed, both movements experienced rejection from wider society, leading them to become increasingly worldrejecting (Wallis 1984) and causing dissonance between the teachings of their prophetic leaders and their uncomfortable reality. Actual external pressures such as persecution by social and governmental agencies, as well as the perception of external pressure (the feeling of rejection),strengthened the internal pressures of cognitive dissonance and ultimately to self-destructive violence in such groups. For decades scholars have investigated the impacts of endogenous and exogenous pressures on NRMs, and while this article focuses on events that occurred over twenty years ago, there is still room to explore the dynamic relationship between the perception of pressure and catastrophic violence.

KW - Aum Shinrikyo

KW - Cognitive dissonance

KW - Endogenous

KW - Eschatology

KW - Exogenous

KW - Perceived pressure

KW - The Peoples Temple

KW - Violence

U2 - 10.1558/ijsnr.19504

DO - 10.1558/ijsnr.19504

M3 - Journal article

VL - 11

SP - 57

EP - 75

JO - International Journal for the Study of New Religions

JF - International Journal for the Study of New Religions

SN - 2041-9511

IS - 1

ER -