Sacred Law and Profane Politics. The Symbolic Construction of the Constitutional Tribunal
Sacred Law and Profane Politics. The Symbolic Construction of the Constitutional Tribunal
Author(s): Tomasz Warczok, Hanna DębskaSubject(s): Social Sciences
Published by: Polskie Towarzystwo Socjologiczne
Keywords: Constitutional Tribunal; neo-Durkheimian cultural sociology; meaning;ritual; legitimization; symbolic code
Summary/Abstract: The paper presents the symbolic dimension of the (re)production of Poland's Constitutional Tribunal, which is considered to be a model legal-political institution. Paying close attention to meaning, narrative, symbolic codes, and rituals, the authors object to a reductionist explanation, based on instrumental thinking and conscious and material interests, of the legal institutions of power. In accordance with neo-Durkheimian cultural sociology, the Tribunal is presented here as an institution created through binary symbolic codes (sacred/profane), and reproduced, in crisis situations, in performative acts constituting moments of ritual purification. The dominant narrative legitimizing the Tribunal counterpoises 'sacred' law with 'profane' politics in order to superimpose subsequent homological classifications (rational/irrational, pure/impure, universal/particular). The Tribunal's symbolic power is thus hidden within a thick web of meanings, which invisibly reinforce its authority.
Journal: Polish Sociological Review
- Issue Year: 188/2014
- Issue No: 4
- Page Range: 461-474
- Page Count: 13
- Language: English