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Glossary›Rites Of Passage

Glossary

Rites Of Passage

Ceremonial events marking an individual's transition from one social or life status to another, characterized by separation, liminality, and reincorporation.

What is Rites Of Passage?

A rite of passage is a ceremony or ritual that occurs when an individual leaves one group to enter another, involving a significant change of status in society. These ceremonial events exist in all historically known societies and are often connected with biological milestones of life—birth, maturity, reproduction, and death—marking the passage from one social or religious status to another. Based on extensive cross-cultural research, rites of passage consist of three distinguishable, consecutive elements: separation, transition, and reincorporation—or, respectively, preliminal, liminal, and postliminal stages.

The concept provides a universal framework for understanding how societies manage transitions, reduce social disruption during status changes, and transmit cultural knowledge across generations. Unlike ordinary ceremonies, rites of passage fundamentally alter the participant’s social identity and relationship to their community.

Origins & lineage

The term is the anglicisation of rite de passage, a French term innovated by ethnographer Arnold van Gennep in his work Les rites de passage, The Rites of Passage. Van Gennep’s most famous publication, Les rites de passage (1909), describes rituals that accompany passing from one stage of life to another. Arnold van Gennep (born 1873, Württemberg, Germany—died 1957) was a French ethnographer and folklorist who learned a remarkable number of languages, 18 by his own count, and thus could effectively use linguistic and philological facts in his ethnographic studies.

Van Gennep noticed, as he worked among different peoples of Africa and Oceania, that birth, puberty, marriage, and death are specially commemorated in every culture. He found a tripartite sequence in ritual observance: separation, transition, and incorporation.

Van Gennep’s work, largely marginalized during his lifetime by the French academic establishment, gained international prominence only after its English translation in 1960. Victor Turner gained notoriety by exploring Arnold van Gennep’s threefold structure of rites of passage and expanding his theory of the liminal phase. In his study of African rites of passage, The Ritual Process: Structure and Anti-Structure (1969), Turner revealed the drama and flux of everyday social life and highlighted the agency of rites in effecting social change. The concept of liminality describes the quality of ambiguity or disorientation that occurs in the middle stage of a rite of passage, when participants no longer hold their pre-ritual status but have not yet begun the transition to the status they will hold when the rite is complete.

How it’s practiced

Rites of passage take vastly different forms across cultures while maintaining common structural elements. Each rite typically consists of three phases: separation from the previous status, a marginal phase where the individual exists in a state of liminality, and re-entry into the community with a new identity and responsibilities.

During separation, individuals are symbolically removed from their previous social position—physically isolated, stripped of identifying markers, or given new clothing. The liminal phase is characterized by ambiguity: participants are “betwixt and between,” belonging fully to neither their old nor new status. Adolescent males undergoing ritual initiation into manhood experience a communitarian bond while separated from their tribe, a phenomenon Turner labeled “communitas.” The final incorporation phase reintegrates the transformed individual into society with new rights, obligations, and recognition.

Among the most iconic of historical Native American rites of passage ceremonies was the Vision Quest (often called Hanblečeya in Lakota, meaning “crying for a vision”), a profound spiritual journey undertaken during adolescence to seek guidance, purpose, and a guardian spirit. In African cultures, males undergo circumcision ceremonies known as lebollo (among Bapedi), ulwaluko (among AmaXhosa), ngoma (among Vatsonga), and bogwera for males and bojale for females (among Batswana).

Symbolic elements—sacred songs, ceremonial dress, ritual objects, physical ordeals, fasting, isolation, and community witness—create the container within which transformation occurs. The specifics vary by culture, but the underlying structure remains consistent.

Rites Of Passage today

Over the last 40 years, many Westerners have begun exploring how to bring rites of passage back into communities, and the concept of a “vision quest” is becoming increasingly recognized in a cross-cultural context, thanks to the work of Stephen Foster & Meredith Little, Bill Plotkin and many others. Steven Foster and Meredith Little, authors of The Book of the Vision Quest and The Four Shields of Human Nature, are among those most influential in developing a form appropriate to our time and place, the vision fast. Since the 1960s, they have trained vision fast guides through their School of Lost Borders.

A visionquest, or vision fast, is the modern version of an ancient pan-cultural wilderness-based rite of passage. The modern version of the Vision Quest or Wilderness Fast typically involves four days and four nights fasting (no food), alone, in the wilderness. Contemporary programs typically span 9-14 days total, including preparation, solo time in nature, and reintegration with community reflection.

Modern seekers encounter rites of passage through wilderness quest organizations, vision fast programs,coming-of-age ceremonies for youth, men’s and women’s groups, and guide training programs. Organizations offer programs addressing life transitions including entering adulthood, midlife crises, divorce, career changes, and movement into elderhood. Some academic institutions now offer training in facilitating contemporary rites of passage.

A rite of passage ceremony is not solely a Native American practice, but rather a human practice encoded onto the psyche by the natural world and seasonal cycles of death and rebirth.

Common misconceptions

Rites of passage are not simply celebrations or parties marking life events. Graduation ceremonies, weddings, and birthday parties may contain ritual elements but often lack the fundamental structure of separation, liminality, and reincorporation that defines authentic rites of passage. The once sacred and transformative ceremonies that informed early cultures with a sense of personal vision, community responsibility and deeply rooted connection to earth and spirit have often been replaced by “pseudo initiations” that do not facilitate the needed shift in consciousness required to enter into new life stations and responsibilities.

Rites of passage are not therapy, though they may have therapeutic effects. They are not recreational wilderness experiences, vision board workshops, or personal development seminars. The discomfort, challenge, and genuine risk (physical, psychological, or social) inherent in traditional rites are not optional features but essential catalysts for transformation.

The term does not refer exclusively to indigenous or tribal practices. While indigenous cultures worldwide have maintained robust rite of passage traditions, the concept describes a universal human pattern found across all societies and historical periods—from Japanese Seijin-shiki to Jewish bar/bat mitzvah to military boot camps.

Modern wilderness-based programs are not attempts to replicate specific indigenous ceremonies. Practitioners have identified the “bare bones”—key elements most rites of passages had in common—and applied them in modern contexts. Ethical programs emphasize drawing from one’s own ancestry and developing appropriate rituals rather than appropriating closed cultural practices.

How to begin

For theoretical understanding, begin with Arnold van Gennep’s The Rites of Passage (1909, English translation 1960), the foundational anthropological text. Victor Turner’s The Ritual Process: Structure and Anti-Structure (1969) expands on liminality and communitas. For contemporary application, Steven Foster and Meredith Little’s The Book of the Vision Quest (1988) provides practical frameworks for modern wilderness-based rites.

To experience a rite of passage, research established organizations with trained guides, such as the School of Lost Borders, Rites of Passage Council, or regional programs offering vision quests, wilderness fasts, or age-specific initiation programs. Most require no previous experience but expect genuine commitment to the process. Programs typically last 9-14 days and involve preparation, solo time in nature (often fasting), and community reintegration.

For those interested in guiding others, multi-year training programs exist through organizations like the School of Lost Borders and Wilderness Guides Council. These require completing your own rite of passage journey before beginning guide training.

Younger seekers should look for age-appropriate coming-of-age programs designed specifically for adolescents and young adults. Parents and educators can explore how to create meaningful threshold crossings within families and communities, even without wilderness access, by studying the underlying structure and adapting it to local contexts.

Related terms

vision questliminalityinitiationceremonyshamanismwilderness therapy
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