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Sorority Rituals - Reflections On Rites of ... - Mari Ann Callais

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A few <strong>of</strong> the participants expressed the belief that their parents taught them the<br />

foundation for their “values” but their sorority ritual is “intertwined” with what they were taught<br />

by their parents. For example:<br />

I feel that my parents instilled morals and values in me that I have lived by since I was<br />

five years old. I also feel like if I had not joined my sorority, that I would not be the<br />

person that I am today either. I think that the core values that my parents taught me are<br />

intertwined with the responsibility that my sorority has taught me. The sorority’s<br />

standards just happen to be the same standards that I was taught years ago.<br />

Another participant reiterated this: “For me, ritual leads back to the way I was raised and my<br />

personal values because I have very high standards <strong>of</strong> myself.”<br />

Some participants also indicated that the sorority ritual was not a means <strong>of</strong> creating<br />

values for women who entered the sorority without a basic foundation <strong>of</strong> values and beliefs:<br />

I think that how people understand ritual and what it means to them has a lot to do with<br />

the way that they were brought up. People who are hearing values and things like that for<br />

the first time or who haven’t heard it through their lives, just kind <strong>of</strong> let it pass by.<br />

The research conducted by Burnett, Moody, and Vaughan (1997) indicates that potential<br />

members seek a sorority environment that has values that parallel their own. This is clearly<br />

indicated in the comments <strong>of</strong> the participants who have entered the sororities with an established<br />

value system that parallels the values expressed through the sorority’s ritual. Their comments<br />

regarding other members who lack a basic foundation <strong>of</strong> values may actually indicate not a lack<br />

<strong>of</strong> values, but rather a difference in values. In choosing a sorority, it has been shown that women<br />

seek groups with the same values (Burnett, et al. 1997). Perhaps it is not the ethical standards and<br />

values expressed in ritual that these women sought, but rather some type <strong>of</strong> other value, such as<br />

friendship, popularity, physical attractiveness, or social opportunity.<br />

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