Iconoclasm

Iconoclasm is the destruction of icons that are part of a certain set, such as religious symbols. A person who performs this is an iconoclast.

Preach to the choir
Religion
Crux of the matter
Speak of the devil
An act of faith
v - t - e

Origin

The original meaning refers to those who destroyed religious iconography which they believed to be idolatrous. There were some examples of this in medieval Byzantine Christianity and Islam, but some of the most notable bouts of iconoclasm took place during the Protestant Reformation of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, when Puritans removed or destroyed religious statues, paintings, stained glass windows and other ornamentation which they believed to be a violation of the Second Commandment. Some iconoclasm was done peacefully by reforming ministers and congregations, but much of it was committed by rioting crowds or soldiers. This was particularly the case during the English Civil Wars and Commonwealth era (1642 to 1660).

Modern usage

Some sects of Islam continue to be aniconist, particularly some Salafis and Wahhabis.[1] In 1965, one of King Faisal's nephews was killed while leading an assault on Saudi Arabia's first television station.[2]

In the early part of the 20th century in the Papuan Gulf region of Papua New Guinea, Vailala MadnessFile:Wikipedia's W.svg was a cargo cult that destroyed all of the traditional religious paraphernalia.[3]

In modern usage, the term "iconoclasm" is rarely used for physical destruction or vandalism. Instead an iconoclast is anybody who challenges, rejects or redefines a popular image or perception, particularly one held to be "sacred" in some way, although this is often in a secular rather than religious sense. Sometimes this can be a visual defacement of a picture, such as the Sex Pistols' modified portraits of Queen Elizabeth II on their record sleeve artwork. More often iconoclastic behaviour takes the form of criticising accepted heroes or concepts. However, this also means that 'iconoclast' is a popular self-description among cranks and their fans accompanied by claims that, for instance, the scientific consensus they don't like amounts to a religious dogma.

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See also

References

  1. See the Wikipedia article on Aniconism in Islam.
  2. Saudi Arabia: A Chronology… Frontline.
  3. The Vailala Madness and Other Essays by F. E. Williams, edited by Erik Schwimmer (1977) University Press of Hawaii. ISBN 0824805194.
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